HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-24 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa•
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• _osse·s Ifil·
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County~s Kidney
'Girl ~ Susan~ Still
F ights for Lile
• •· Ill Ie·
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Botto1n Drops o .. ,t
· Of All•nnde: Dar
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Conte1npt Charges
DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY .AFTERNOON, JUNE 2 .. , 1969
VOL. U. NO. 1 .. I SECTIONS, 2t l"A•EI
I Arabs Stir
New Battles
In Mideast
By United Prtu Intern•Uon•1
-Re inf orce1nents
Reach Ben Het;
More Needed
, . . :.. · , _ · Liberty Sees
Sti~kiug · Ne~k Out Lawyer; Waits
Arab ~~mandos ln tbelr, most daring
taid since end. of lhe. June 1967 war blew
up (our 12-inch oil pi~ in the. •lsrltll
port of Haifa today, setting fins that
bi"'l'd for i19<1n. ~ tempo of flgtiljng
, a!oq·tiJe-Su" CUal lncTased and lllere
wire alr artiUeF:iaOd 18nc1 betOes. ·
An Israeli spokesman In TeJ.•Aviv Yid
' l.sraell jets shot' dow1u11 ~~Mla hi
a dogf~bt over the Gu'ti of Suez. An r . I ~ . . • ., ' '
Egyptian spokesman reported an Israeli
plane shot dowo in lhe fight •nd said
EgyptJan commandos wiped out an
Israeli anny base across the canal, Jdll.
Jng 22 men.
SAIGON (t.:PI) -U.S. military
spokesmen reported t o d a y a convoy of
2,000 reinforcements with tons o( am·
munition had bnttlcd through encircling
Con1munist forces lo try to lift the siege
()f Ben l-Iet \\'here the Green Beret and
South Vietnamese defenders fough t off
four ground assaults and killed 153 at-
tackers.
But any relief to Ben Hct, a U.S.
Special Forces camp in the central
highlands. was only temporary. North
Vietnamese gunners in the surrounding
hWs hit the camp 1'.tonday with 199
rounds or artillery and mortar lire -the
heaviest of lhc 48-day siege.
Communist gunfire south of Ben Jiet
shot down a U.S. Air Force CJJO Hercules
transporl. killing the six men aboard, and
lhen shol down an Army Ullt rescue
hcllcopter at the scene, \vounding three
men aboard.
The U.S. Co1nm and also reported two
other aircra ft Jost in the stepped up
fighting.
While Viel Cong units carri~I out a new
terrorist campaign in the Mekong Delta
far to the south of Saigon, military
spok,smen reported a new 4,000-man
Ameri ::an oHen sive in lhe Khe Sanh area
-Operalion Utah Flat, \rhich began
June 12 and ha s killed 161 communists at
a loss or 28 Americans killed and 80
\YOunded.
U.S. ~1arines involved in the operation
nne mile south of Khe Sanh added to the
toll early today by selt.ing up an ambush
trap ou tside their base perimeters.
A spokesman said a platoon or 1'1arines
01>ened fire on Communists U1cy sinv
sneaking toward the base. alerting their
colleagues inside. The leathernecks th en
retreated back inside lhe perin1efer to
add their firepower to the battle. The
Communists killed three Americans and
, \vounded 13 but lost 44 dead in the attack
v.·hich failed to breach the defenses.
In the lalest round or righting t h e
Communists shelled 15 all ied bases and
Vietnamese towns during the night.
Casualties were reported negligible, but
the new terrorism in the Mekong Delta
took a hea vie r toll.
Jn the Delta town of Cai Tau , 60 miles
6oulhwest or Saigon. a bomb set off in a
market place Monday killed six civilians
and wounded 21. A Communist road mine
near coasta l Phan Thiel killed two
<:ivU\aru and wounded five. Five other
civilians were wounded today when Com·
munlst.s fired two 840 rockel grenades in·
to a regiona l forces outpost %2 miles
t;auth ot Saigon.
Minor flghting flared in other areas of
Vietnam but the mOst dramalic battles
l\ICre around B4!:n •1ct where Air Force
8523 Monday dropped al least 180 tons of
bombs on the hllls overlooking Ben He~.
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Will Glu e HoUl Guillotine? For Sheriff
LONDON (UPI) _,Michael Booty stak-
ed his life today on his company's new
glue.
•Booty, 27, will place his head in a
guillotine in the chamber or horrors at
Madame Tussa ud 's Waxworks tonight.
The guillotine has been altered so that
its razor-sharp blade is suspended by a
rope which ha s been cut and rejoined by
the new glue.
ll the glue hQlds the blade should end
its deadly plunge just above Booty 's
neck.
If it does not hold. a spokesman for
:r.1adame Tussaud 's said the blade will go
through Booty's -neck ''like a butcher'!
knife going through a piece of steak."
The household glue is called "Power
Pack" and ill. manufacturers, Borden
Chemicals Ltd., claim it is the "strongest
glue in the world." .
"Our engineers say it is 99.9 percent
certain the glue wiU hold,'' Booty said
bravely. "Believe me, if I wasn't con-
fident. I wouldn't be doing it.''
Booty's w i f e Susanne, 26, said s h e
prefers not to watch and will remain
home with their 7-month-o ld daughter,
His firm said they have insured his life
for 100,000 pounds ($280,000).
Charg e Dropped Against
A ll-nude Santa Ana Bar
Contem pt charges against a Santa Ana court order by again putting on its stage
bar at which all-nude entertainment had all·nude performers. But prosecutors ex-
been banned were dismissed Monday plained that the bottom dropped out of
when the district attorney's office refused the case last week when Apartment A·
to press charges. Go-Go manager Harry Maselli was
Cleared by Supe rior Court Judge . cleared of the charges.
Claude Owens was the Apartment (no-DismiS!al carries with it, however. the
connection with the Apartment A·Go-Go), proviso that the bar must not allow ils
a Main Slreel tavern whi ch fa ces trial femalP. entertainers to "defy the spirit of
\l'ilh four other walering places ort the order" by wearing misleading in.
charges or featuring bottomless en-nova I kins in certain areas of the body.
tertainment. Both bars have guaranteed that their
It has been alleged that the Apartment, perfonners ·will be covered in the low
like the Apartment A-Go-Go, defied the pelvic area in the time preceding trial.
Kid1iey Patient
Susan Keeps Up
Fight fo r Life
Susa n Mazze's long right for life went
into its fourth week thday as anxious
Or8.nge County 1'-fedical Center doctors
and nurses maintain a round the clock
'igil over the 17-year-old k ·1 d n e Y
transplanl patient.
Today·s-bulletln Listed the condition or
the high achool girl ls, •·critical", the
diagnosis that has been the unfailing
verdict of her surgeon1 for the 1>1st two
wef:ks. "General systemic problems and
major complicallonlli Jn the lungs are not
improving," the report 1dd1.
Doctors state that the left kidney they
grafted in}O Susan from her mother. Mrs. 1'~lorcnce Mazze, U, is functlonlr1g
pcrlecdy. Her critie1l condition 11tems
from post operallvc C<Jmpllcatlons that
are apparently defying therapy.
WnJng up with them when' the trial date
Is set will be representattves of the
llarbor Inn, La Habra, the Country Girl
No. 2, Anaheim and the Vampire Room,
Santa Ana .
Many of the entertainers who put on
their bottomless shows at the bars have
been heavily fined with the alternative of
lengthy prison stays. Among I.hem is
Carol Cybulski , 32, of Laguna Beach, who
drew a $5,000 fine or 500 da3•s in jail for
her torrid, "Hey Jude" belly dancing at
the Apartment A-Go-Go.
LUCKY READERS
SEE SHOW FREE
Everyone loves to see a good lirtworks
show on the Fourth of July, but not
everyone gets lo see one for free.
Some DAILY PILOT readers are going
to luck out this week and get !ttt passes
to the July 4th show at Anahdm Stadium.
There is no obligation on your part.
The lucky readers will find tbelr-nalhes
scattered throughout the. classified sec-
tion this week.
Better have a look right now.
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"Candlelight killer" Robert Willard
Liberty is back In custody today, three
weeks after he walked to freedom from
an open ward at Metropolitan State
Hospital in Norwalk.
But th• former mental patient almost
had to persuade Orange C.ounty sheriff's
officers to lake him back, despite reports
this past week that the hunt for the 21·
year-old Westmin!ter man was being
"intensified."
Liberty checked in Monday at the of-
fice of his attorney, Juli u's Austero of
Garden Grove, and asked Austero if it
was true . that he was the subject of a
search. He told his lawyer that he had
been visiting friends in Oregon and had
only learned on his return that he was on
the wanted list.
Liberty had to wait for some hours in
Austero'e office while sheriff's in·
v.estigators and district attorney's of·
ricers got their signals uncrossed. He was
then rushed to Orange County MediCal Cen~er where he will be held pending the
setting of a. court hearing.
It was at a court hearing three weeks
ago that the flight of Liberty from the
Norwalk raclllty was Urst made public.
Deputy District Attorney Al Wells con·
demned the carelessness of Norwalk
authorities for allowing "a dangerous
man Uk! Uberty to walk away from his
ward in such a ridiculously easy man-ner."
Well!. later dismissed hospital proiests
that Uberty's release was octasioned by
a. "cl~jcal error." 11le angry proseoutor
accused the· hospital of s t a m p i n g "dlsc.~arged" on the records of patienls
who had actually escaped from the facili·
ly.
.Ll~_rty got the label "cand lelight
killer from officers who investigated the
bizarre slaying of Mrs. Marcella Landis,
the attractive brunette who shared his
apartment at 8382 Westminster Ave.,
Westminster.
Officers said they found Liberty on
June 4, 1966, strumming his guitar 11:nd
sofUy singing wllile the body of his
paramour lay draped across a living
room 10fa. Astonished officers noted that
Liberty had set burning candles au
aroumt the body of his alleged victim.
. Both Liberty and the strangled victim
had king records of mental Jllness and
both had been diagnosed and treated iQ
the mentel ward · of Orange Cotfnfy
Medical Center. Both, it was latt:r
discovered, had made several unsuc·
cessful suicide atltmpt.s.
Llberty was sent to Atascadero after a
Superior Court Judge ru,ed ,ha, the
Westminster man w11 Insane and unable
to assist In his own defense.
He ls today . regard'!(I as sant by
Atascadero and Metropolitan s t a t e
P.oopltal offlcl•,•·
Kl (LED IN VIETNAM
Pfc P 1ul R. Ross
Funeral Slated
For Beach GI
Killed in War ' .
Funeral services for Anny Pfc Paul
R. Ross, 20, of 16762 Irby Lane, Hunting.
ton Beach, who died last week in Vie(·
nam action, will be conducted at 1 p.m.,
Thursday, in the Peek Family Chapel,
Westminster. Burial will follow ln Ule
Good Shepherd Cemetery.
Pfc Ross graduated from Fountain
Valley High School in 1967, where he had
played varsity baseball. He en!Lsted in
the Army Nov, 28, 1968. and had 'been
in Vietnam one month when he died.
Survivors include his parents .. Mr. an~
Mrs. James R. Ross of the Irby Lane
address: a sister, Pamela. or the home,'
and h"is grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Adams of Wyoming.
Sleepwalking
Tot Saves Family
From Home Fire
'rhe slcepwal klng tendencies of·f,I 2·year.
old Cypress boy probably siv.ed the lives ·
or his parents and four other1 children
early Mondiy morning, County Fire ·
.Department officials said today.
ThOmas Q.lchards wandered from his
bedroom early, in the morning and his ·
brother Anthony Jr., 3, searched for him.
He found the house filled wlth smoke and
awakeped his parents. 4
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His father, Anthpny• Richards, s 11. l d
youug Thomas. was f9'1nd in the llVif!g
room, stTII asleep, after·· lh'ree other
children had Deeri taken from ihe burning ·
home.
The fire department was called but the
names were subdued before•thf:y arrived.
Flremen found the home Hlled •W l•lih·
smoke from the blau which "they lblnk
started from defective wirin1 Jn a
refrigerator. · ·
Damage was esUm~OO al $1,:KJO to the
home at 5325 Vista. Real.
Marines Hospitalized
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -TWo Matin•
rctrulll ltationed at the Marine Corps
Recruiting Depot. In San Diego have•bttn
hospitall,,ed with menln&ococtal men·
lngitla, • Marine spo kesman here reporta.
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Haifa is one of braers major cities on
the Mediterraoeao 52 miles north of Tel
Aviv and the COWltry's main pert. Israeli
police said the comman\ios struck around
8 a.m., blowing up the four plpellnea and
spilling 1,500 tons of blazing fuel.
Firemen fought the blaze with foam for
lour hours before they brought it under
control, ·but nUnor fire! blazed for hours
a:rterward.s, witnesses reported. Police
and troops cordoned off the area and
began a search for a group of men seen
near the pipe.line before the blast.
Police sources said they found · one
unexploded charge of explosives near the
site of the blast and rounded up several
dozen Arabs in their dra"gnet. The site of
the explosion is about 13 miles below the
heaVIJy guarded Lebanon border and 33
miles west of the Jordapian and Syrian
borders.,
·Arab guerrillas blew up a section of the ·
American-owned Trans-Arabian Pipeline
(TAPLINE) Milf 31 at a Spot where it
crosses Israeli-occupied Syrian territory
on tli~ waY from , S"audi .Arabia tO ell
termlnaJs in Lebanon. About 8,000 toos
sj>illed Into the Sea of ·Galilee, Israel '!
main water supply, and the Israeli •
government closed the pipeline.
In Cairo, .western diplomats said that
what at first appeared to be roUtine Sue:
Canal incidents teemed to,be snowballing
out of control,
Also in Cairo, the Palestine Armed
Struggle Command · said 1 guerrillas from
Al As'Sifa, the milliary arm of Al Falah,
were responsibJe_.f91' the raid on the
JSraeli oU refinery pipeline. ' . .
Or1111ge Coan
Weatliu
The sun ;nay poke his sleepy
head lhr.ougb. the c!Ouds for a bit
longer on Wednesday as lhe Qc..
; ange ·~ €1JP9ys temperatures
in the lower 70's.
INSIDE TODA 't'
Sen. John Schmitz.' se~ class
control legislaUon, wl&ich letr ~rtnt1 fkcide if' their ~oun0::
.ster1 wiU Ulke the cburu, hat
rxustd ~icial hurdl~. See Storti Pag• 3.
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: DAILY 'llOT s
South Viets
Chide Cong
On Pullout
-PAIUS (UPI) -A South Vl•tnamue
oftlcial aald today tbo Viet C-0111 are
"putting the cart before the horse" in
their reported agreement to withdraw
troop& from Cambodia once lhe fighting
ltopa in Vietnam.
The Cambodiall chief of state. Prince
Norodom Slbanoult, aonoun«d Satur<lay
lhe \'let Coog had promised him In writ·
ing to withdraw all their troops from
Cambodia once the war was over.
The pledge would be the first time the
Viet Cong formally had admitted tho
presence of Communlst forces in Cam·
bodia.
But a respoogible South Vietnamese or-
ficlal said today : "lf the Communist
troops are still In Cambodia, peace will
never return. The presence of Communist
troops in Cambodia and South Vietnam
as well as Laos is the cause of the war."
On Ille r<portl ol the pledge made lo
Slhanool<, be aai<j: "This Is putting Ille
cart before the bc:irse."
The allied position taken at the Viel·
nam peace talks, now in their 23rd week,
hu been that the withdrawal of Viet
mlllt be part of an eventual peact deal.
The Communists have n e v e t
actnowled&ed allied claims that Viet Cool ,,..... from Cambodl1 and Loos
bGr'lkr sections of Cambodia and Laos as
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Mesa WQman,
Clemente Man
Hurt in Crashes
A Costa Mua woman and a ·San
Clemente man were seriously Injured 1n a
two-<:ar crash Monday night.
In Orange County Medical Center suf-
lorlng from multiple tnjwia are Lori J.
Nellton of 2194 Ra.Jelgb Ave., Costa Mesa,
and Rodney B-Wyatt, of 2016 Loo
Alamos:, San Clemente.
Mia Nielam was a paSRnger In a car
driven by Joeeph E. Kirby-Smith, 23, or
4305 Hiiaria Way, Newport Beach, whi ch
collided with one driven by Franklin Valli
of Rl•erside.
California Highway Palrol officers aaid
Klrby-8mlth was IOUthbound on Irvine
Boulevard and Vaill eastbound on Culver
Avenue. Both received minor injuries.
Woman in Trunk
During Car Crash
WAPPINGERS FALI..S, N.Y. (UPI) -
It wu Lynne Harbl.son'1 car, and she wls
the only one in it when it hit the parked
Cir.
But aht wasn't exactly driving it. Aa a
matter of fact, she was in the tnink at
the time.
Mrs. Harbison. rt, a bousewite from
nearby Hopewell Junction, told police she
parked hefcar in' friend'• driveway and
was removing a playpen from the trunk
when the car began to roll backward.
She jumped into the trunk to avoid
being hit -and the tnmk slammed down,
locklng her inside., .
The car rolled down the dnveway,
acr-OSS the street and slammed Into a
parked car. On impact, the tnmk lid
opened and Mn. Harbison emerged unln·
jur<d.
Assembly Committee
Trims Reagan Budget
SACRAMENTO (UPI) T h e
Legislature, moving with unusual r;peed,
brushed aside normal procedure today in
an attempt to negotiate a compromi!e
lilate budget be!ott •June 30 deadline.
A dimmed down version of Gov.
Ronald Reagan's $8.Z bllllon hudget was
sent to the full Assembly rrom the
Auembly Ways and Means Committee.
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DA ILY PILOT Stefl' PMN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S NEIGHBORHOOD YOUTH CORPS
Alex Hinojosa, 16 {left), and Alfr~ Sanchez, 17
Payoff for Parks
NYC Program Aids Valley, Youths
By TER RY COVILLE
Of Ille O.llY l"lltl Slaff
The best trimmed tree is ope that bard·
ly look!: trimmed.
That's just one of many tips two young
men from Colonia Juarez have learned
while working with the Fountain Va1Jey
Parks Depa r tment under the
Neighborhood. Youth Corps program.
Alex Hinojosa, 16, and Alfred Thomas
Sanchez, 17, both say the federall y-sup-
ported program has provided them with
one of the most challenging summers
they've ever had.
Neither youth ls a stranger to work -
Alex has been a gardener's helper and
Alfred sanded boat! -but both had
somewhat of a bleak outlook for work op-
portunities tJl1a aummer untll they ran in-
to an NYC representative at the Colonia
Juarez Community Center.
"Now we're dty employes," says
Alex.
1bey' began working last February, but
only afternoons while school was in
session. Now they work fulltime, under
the supervision of Henry Agonia, field
boss of the park crew.
NYC is a federal program to find jobs
and training for youth up to the age of 18.
The government pays 90 percent of the
Blacks, Police Clash
HARRISBURG, Pa . (AP) -At least
eight persons were arrested and live
others injured Monday nighl in a rock·
throwing confrontation between about 100
Negroes and policemen.
Almost 100 patrolmen and state
polictmen moved into th ig capitol city's
Hill Section after the disturbances broke wt.
cost, as long as another agency -in this
case the city of Fountain Valley -
provides the work and supervision.
In Fountain Valley Alex an d Alfred are
the only two workers, but Agonia has
been so pleased with _their efforts he
plans to ask for ihe addition of three
more youths in the near future.
"I'm pleased with the whole program,"
says Agonia, "maybe these two are ex-
cepliona1, but I'd like to try some more."
Alex works with' the tree trimming
crew. "1 only pick up the loose brush and
limbs," he says, "but I've lea med a lot
about trimming trees."
Alfred sees more of the park! in his
capacity as mower and planter. "1 never
did this kind of work before," he ex·
plains. "and if It weren't for this job I'd
probably just be loafing now."
Their goal is perhaps permanent work
with the city in the parks: department,
and Agonia believes they can make the
jump.
''It's been real good training for them,"
he says.
The program is run at little cost to the
city. Supervision is the primary re·
quirement and Henry Agonia puts in a lot
of time to that end, but he has the
respect of both boys who Jaber him
"tops".
Pay rate is about $1.40 per hour .
Not overwhelming, but a lot more than a
boy can earn sit Ung on a street comer. A
maximum of 32 hours work per week is
also placed on all NYC workers.
Girls are eligible too, and the city is
thinking about training a young secretary
or clerk's aide under the program.
Alex sums up the experience like this,
"It's just the right kind of work for me.
And I get a lot more out of it than just
hours and money."
Deputies Investigating
Laguna Club Bomb Scare
Orange County Sheriff's depuUes today
are investigating a bomb threat said to
have beell made a few hours after they
quelled a wild riot Sunday night at the
Laguna Beach Country Clu b.
and lL! members reeeived a warning
from the management.
Brown told officeni today that the
per30n who made the bomb threat
"sounded sober" but background noises
indicated that the call came from a bar.
Columnist Pegler Dies:
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Bungling Burglar
Tries , Tries
Again But Fails
A bungli.Dg burglar huff.al and puffed
and finally blew it early tocl"ay, setUng off
an alarm which brought police to the
scene of. his fourth attempted entry at' a
Costa. Mesa shopping center.
Patrolman Al Muir rolled up to the Vic·
toria Mesa Center, 1125 Victoria St.,
about 3 a.m .. but found nothing taken
from any of the suites.
Attempted entry was made at Owl Li·
quors; the Olden Times tavern; Helmut's
Hairstyling, and. ~ Victoria Mesa
Barber Shop.
Officer Muir said pl'LJ11arks on the
doors of the ahop9 and l&oru iJ:»_dicated
the would-be burglar tried five dlUerent
tools but none worked.
Battered Body
Of Woman Found
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The battered,
partially·nude body of a woman with
brunette hair was found In an alley early
today near the down town area, police
said.
Authorities were trying to identify the
victim, who they said was in her early
40s. .
Police s a-Id residenls of houses and
apartments in the area heard a man and
woman arguing. Officers di!covered tbe
body a few moments later.
A concrete block found near the body
apparently was the death weapon , of·
ficers said.
Santa Ana ]\•Jan Dies
lu Vietnam Action
Navy Photographer's Mate lC Robert
G. Strickland of Santa Ana, died in Viet-
nam action. the U.S. Defense Department
announced h-ionday.
The husband of Mrs. Constance E.
Strickland, 3512 W. Chestnut St .,
Strickland was one of 115 American
servicemen killed in action recenUy.
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Grand Jury Turns Down '
Chief of Finance Plan
A Senate bill which, if approved, would
empower county supervisors of many
California counties to appoint a director
Of finance got the thumbs down sign to-
day from the Orange Cowlty Grand Jury.
County legislators are being urged by
the investigative panel 1to vote "no" on
Senate Bill 646. They are informed by the
jury that creation of such an office would
turn over the powers of the auditor-con-
troller, tax collector and treasurer -all
elected officials -to an officer "directly
re!ponsible to tbe board and the county
Pendleton Brig
Brawl Hurts 26
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -One
guard and 25 pris6ners were treated. for
injuries after a brawl Sunday rught
between inmates at the Camp Pendleton
f..1arine Base brig, officials reported Mon-
day.
The guard and one prisoner required
hospitalization, but names of the Marines
involved were not released.
The fight was between white and Negro
prisoners in a compound used by 250 in-
mates, officials said. Not all of the in·
mates took part and there was no at-
tempt to break out, they said.
Chinese Tm·n Back
Pacifists' Boat
TOKYO (AP) -Six American pacifists
who sailed from Japan June 12 on a
goodwill voyage to Communist China
returned today and reported the Chinese
turned them away from the port at
Shanghai.
The American Friends Service Com-
mittee in Tokyo, w h I c h had helped
organize the voyage of the SO.foot yacht
Phoenix, said the Americans sailed back
to Nagasaki.
executive."
Passage of the bill "would mean that
independent elected officials, charged
with the duly of collecting, reLaining ancP
disbursing county funds, would be replac-1
ed by an appointed officer who would be
directly responsible lo the county a<i
ministration rather than to the people,
the Grand Jury says.
Legislators are urged lo remembtr
that "the offiet!s of auditor-controller, tax
collector and treasurer are an in·
dispensable part of the &ystem ol checks
and balances necessary to good govern.
menL" ·•
"It is essential," the Grand Jury.
claims, "that the holders of these posi..
tions be independent from the ad-
minirlration in the performance of theiD
duties .. ,
Curious Girls
Get Peek at Jail ·
Three pre-teen girls who wanted a look,,
at the inside of a Costa Mesa school
nurse's office got it Monday, along with a
peek at the interior of 'ihe local police
department.
The youngsters, ooe 11 and the othe\,
12, were caught at Everett Rea Sch~!,
2051 Pomona Ave., and turned over to
Patrolman Hal llolbrook I o r U,.
vestigalion. r
Nothing was taken and the ciffiet! had
been left unlocked, so they were released
to their parents pending juvenile court
action against them fdr illegal entry.
Bunker Visits Thieu-
SAIGON CAP) -U.S. Ambassador
Ellsworth Bunker called on Presi dent
Nguyen Van Thieu f..1onday evening for
the first time in nearly two weeks. There
was speculation the two may have di&-
cussed the possibility of elections as part
of a settlement of the Vietnam war. ' 1
Owner-manager Ben K. Brown told of-
ficers that one of his employes received a
telephone call from an unknown person
and was warned : ''\Ye are going to blow
up your place tonight.''
Th.at call came shortly after deputies
had arrested five persons at the plush
Laguna retreat in .Ali..w Canyon . .AU five.-
were jailed and Identified as principals in
Agreetnetit Shattered
a wild free-for_.11 that ended with the
manager and a sheriff's deputy belng
hurled Into lhe pool.
Officers said the fracas started when a
poolside wedding party got out of hand
Santa Ana Gets
F acelifting Job
Downtown Santa Ana Ydll get a facelif·
Ung later this year in a "beautification"
move sponsored by the Santa An.a City
Center AssoclaUon.
Burt Smith of the association said 63
percent of the property owners concerned
are suppcrt.lng the move which will raise
money to install decoraUve sidewalks,
modern street lighting, trees and
landscaping along 4th Street belwt!t!n
Ross and Spurgeon streets, a six·bloek
area.
A one-time levy of $100 a front foot will
pay toe the. improvement which may be
completed by Janu;1ry 1970. Smith said.
The city council has approved angle
pukina in the area and p11.rklng metert
have bee n remov~ for a six month trial
period in an effort to stimulate business.
as requested b)' the 43soclation.
• -.
·Mesa, Newport Renew Annex Fight
Just ·one week after announet!ment of a
tentative boundary agreement, Costa
?o.1esa and Newport Beach officials are
about to go before county authorities
again with ironically conflicting an·
nexatlon requ ests.
The Local Agency Formation com-
mission (LAFC) will listen to arguments
in behalf of three annexation plans at It!
2 p.m. meeting Wednesday In Santa Ana .
Talks between councllmanlc boundary
committees trom Newport Beach and
Costa 1.1esa -advised by LAFC ex·
ecutlve officer Richard Turner -seem·
ingly hammered out mutual agretment.
but II was rejected June 16 by Newport
city officials.
Now, on the eve of a decision, the
LAFC Is ad vised by Turner to approve
the Costa Mesa Back Bay Annt:xatlon No.
I. and either di:sapprovt, 01 ask Newport
Beach to withdraw and change Its own.
BllsicaUy, the conflict center'11 on
Tumer·a suggestion that Tustin Avenue
-the traditional boundary line between
Newport Stach and Costa f..1esa -re-
1naln so.
Leaders of both cities agreed to this in
•
theory at their respective June 16 city
council meetings. but Newport Beach
leaders then voted to continue their own
annexation attempl.s.
The conflicting annexation proposals
faced with the problem of overlapping
are the Costa Mesa Back Bay No. 1, • ~
acre parcel between Tustin and Santa
Ana avenues. 119rth of La Canada Way
and north and south of Mesa Drive, which
bisects it.
Newport Beach's La Canada annex , 23,
acres west of Tustin Avenue between
Orchard Drive on the north and 660 feet
south of University Drive overlaps the
Costa Mesa proposal on it! eastern hall.
The third annexation proposal is
Newport Beach's West Santa Ana Heights
bid, an 89-acre section between Palisades
Road on the north and Orchard aod Mesa
drives on the south, Santa Ana Avenue on
the west and • point west of Acacia
Street on the east.
This waa originally 116 acres, but prc>-
testing mldtnts led Newport Beach of.
• flclals kl shave off 27 acres on the
ta!ltern half of the 1nnelu1tlon package.
Turner's communications to Co!ta
t.1esa and Newport Buch oUlcials lhis
week •arte that Tustin Avenue I& the
most logical geographic boundary line
between the Harbor Area cities.
Torner explains this thoroughfare has
been used as the annexation boundary by
both cities 10 times, three by NewPort
aeach land nibbles and seven dating back
to 1955 on the CMta 1.fesa side.
Suggested solution to the overlapping
problem is wilhdrawal by Newport Beach
of Its West Santa Ana Heighl.s annexation
request and trimming boundaries of the
other to only Tustin Avenue lim-
eistward.
The Pegasus Homeowners' Association
backs the additional westerly annexation
1novc by Newport Beach, while opponents
organized against it include the Santa
Ana Heights Voters AssoclaUon.
t..ast time Newport Beach and Colla
Mesa leaden struggled over annexation
bids In the same general area, the con-
flict was just 80Uth of-Palisades Road.
Both peUtlonr; were den.led by the
l..AFC on April 10. 1968, at which time a
one·year moratorium on any moff! such
bids was lmpoted and -the c!UP.1 urged to
nRme emissaries to work out their future
boundaries together.
Costa ~lesa's Back Bay Annexatioii :No.
I was filed this past April JO and claima;
more than 68 percent of property owDeT1·
in the affected area back the proposed
merger. Involved are 237 residents and
117 registered voters. '
The Santa Ana Heights Voters Associa-
tion opposing Newport Beach annexahon
of their county territory includes more
than 40 parcels of land.
The spoil! or battle at stake in
northward annexation moves by each c:ity
lit in the 238-acre Jrvine lnduslf!al
Complex north of Palisades Road and,
west of the Orange County Airport. ,.
&th cities tried to block each other Qff
by annexation when lhe prime pro~,
was owned by the McDonnell·Doui s'
Corp., but It revert~ back to the Irv ·'
Company under terms or a sales aar~r
ment contract. , ..... ,1 Cost.a Mesa has since annexed about 40
more acres on the east side of NewPQtt ,
Boulevard and south of Palisades Road .. ~
an lrshaped chunk from the Santa Ana
Country Club parking lot on the south to
Santa Ana Avenue on the east.
Newport Beach did not oppose Ufls
Costa Mesa move. ' •v""'
•
. • .. : •
... -Bunt~ng-ton Bea-elt -·-'}'.oday's Fl•a~
" ,
)l'O~. 62, NO. 150, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI>-TUESD'AY, ~UNE 24. 1969 TEN CENTS ...
Petitioners •
JJrge '.Annex
·or Sunset
·1 0ne hundred and sixty Sunset Beach
residents .Monday petitioned Huntington
Beach City Clerk Paul Jones for an·
nexation of their tiny community.
"Mrs. Virginia M. Strain,'secretary of
the Sunset Beach Community Council,
, turned over the signatures, climaxing
months of intensive work by several
citizens who have been anxious to have
the area aMexed .
.,Accordin gto Mrs. Slrain, the Sunset
Beach residents would be provided with
better police and fire protection if the
area were to become part of Hu11tington
Beach. She said annexation would
represent "the last part In a jig-s~w
puzzle" which would complete the city
map.
, She Indicated the primary reason for
seeking. annexation lies in municipal
~nefits the area would gain.
Paramount i..!I the fact that the city has
Shown favorable reaction to property-
owners' demands to turn a disputed mile.
long strip into a public parking area, she
ta.id.
, The narrow strip or land, which fl:l~S
between North Pacific and South Pacific
Avenues, is currently owned by the
Southern Pacific ltailroad Company and
bas been earmarked for construction of a
ieries of apartment duplexes.
Construction of apartments has already
begun over the loud complaints of many
residents who have asked the county to
purchase the land for beach parldpg.
To date, the county has shown an in-
luest in developing the strip into a park-
tng lot, especially since virtually nn
e:paces are currently available ~n
beachgoers. The county, however, is
without the necessary funds thus far.
The Huntington Beach City Council
Monday approved a resolution backing
;fhe idea of the county acquiring the strip
~or a parking lot and aF;r,elng generally
that if the county buys the land and the
city annexes the area, the ~ .IGUld
retain control of the parking Jots.
County supervisors consider ,buying the
land at their Wednesday meeting.
Next step in the annexation procedure
will be a public hearing at 8 p.m. July 28
in the Huntington aeach City Council
Chambers.
By that time Sunset Beach residents
opposing the annexation must have more
than 50 percent of the property owners
behind thein to kill the process.
If the property owners do not defeat
the proposal, a general election will be
called sometime in September to
determine if the majority of the residents
would prefer to be a part of Huntington
·s,each. ·
According to City Clerk Jones, the an·
nexalion could be completed by the first
\veek of November, if everything goes ac-
cording to schedule.
Funeral Rites
Conducted for
Dr. R. M. Polentz
Dr. Richard Miles Polentz, a resident
of Huntington Harbour for the past five
years, died Saturday at Veteran·s
Hospital in Long Beach.
Funeral services were held today at
Waverly Chapel, Fairhaven 1'.femorial
Park, Santa Ana.
Dr. Polentz, who died after a brief II·
lness was a dentist for 14 years with of. . -fices in Anaheim.
He was graduated from the University
cf California Dental School in San Fran-
cisco, and served in World War 11.
Survivors include his wife, Barbara f
three sons, Jonathan, Christopher and
Douglas, all of the home, 16931 Bolero
Lane, Huntington Harbour : and his
mother, Ethel Polentz of Danville, Calif.
In addition, he leaves four brothers,
Perry of Saratoga, Lloyd of Pasco.
Wash., Wilford and Ra ymond o f
Fullerton; and a sister, Elizabeth Cross
of Danville.
Memorial contributions may be . made
lo Children'! Hospital of Orange County.·
Arrangements are under direction ot
Winblgler Family Mortuary. Interment
will be at Fairhaven Memorial Park.
LUCKY READERS
SEE SHOW F REE
1 Everyone Joves lo see a good fireworks
1how on the Fourth of July, but nol
• 1' everyone gets to see one tor free. .
Some DAU. Y PILOT readers are going
it> luck out this week And get free passes
to the July 4th show 1t Anaheim Stamum.
There is no obligation oo your J)lrt.
, The lucky readers will find their names
ecattued throulhout the clasallied -
tlon tbi!I week.
Better have a look right now.
I •
•
La.rwin Plea Fails
Court Won't Change Tract Decision
The Larwin Co. failed Monday ln Its se-
cond attempt to have the Fourth District.
Court of Appeals in San Bernardino
overturn an Orange County Superior
Coort decision halting its proposed 500-
hoi.ne tract in Fountain Valley.
Appellate Judie Hilton H. McCabe
denied the fin11's petition for a writ of
prohibition and mandate filed June 16
against the lower court, recal eader
Eugene Van Dask and the City Foun-
tain Valley.
the tentaUve tract map filed by the
Larwin Company was not legal '4ftd that
property (SOuthern Califomia Edison
Company easement) not owned by the
builders could not be used to their credit
to offset redueed. lot sizes.
Van Dask orl(inally flled the suit in
SUNSET BEACH ANNEX PETITIONS ARRIVE AT CITY HALL
City Clerk Janes Accepts Papers Fram Mrs. Strain
Larwin Co. attorneys were tryi , with
theii' second appeal, to have the 'gher
court change an April 30 Superior ourt
ruling which said zone changes ma e by
the city on the Larwln property were im·
proper and the tract could not be built.
Controversy over the proposed small·
·Jot development touched off the city's
current recall campaign led by Van Dask
and directed against Mayor Robert
Schwerdtfe@:er, Vice MayOr Donald
Fregeau and Councilman Joseph Cour-
reges.
Death Suspec!
Confounds Law,
Turns Self -In
Red · Guns Open Up "Candlelight killer" Robert Willard
Libei'ty is back in custody today, three
weeks after he walked to freedom from
an open ward at f\.fetrop;ilitan State
Hospital in Norwalk.· Convoy ReachesBenHet 'A similar appeal sllbmltted to the Ap-
pellate Court in May was also denied on
June 3.
The Superior Court~ decision contested
by Larwin attorneys and the majority
faction (those named in the recall action)
of the city council, said basically that the
city's ioning procedures were incorrect,
But the fonner mental patient almost
had to persuade Orange Coonty sheriff's
officers to take him back, deapite report.a
this past week that the hunt for the 21·
year-old Westminster man was being
''intensified." But Relief Temporary Uberty checked in Monday at tbe of-
fice of his attorney, Julius Austero of
Garden Grove, and asked Austero if -it
was true that· he was the subject of a
search. He told his lawyer Ulat he had
been visiting friends in Otegon and had
only learned on his return that he was on
the wanted list.
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. military
spokesmen reported t o d a y a convoy of
2,000 reinforcements with tons of am-
munition had battled through encircling
Communist forces to try to lift the siege
of Ben Het where the Green Beret and
South Vietnamese defenders fough t off
four ground assaults and killed 153 at-
tackers.
But any relief to Ben Het, a U.S.
Special Forces camp in the central
highlands, was only temporary. North
Vietnam~ guoo.ers la Uje suqound\flg hilfs'~ hif the c'clmp 1ionday with 199
rounds of artillery and mortar fire -the
heaviest of the 48-day siege.
canunWUst gunfire south of Ben Het
shOt doWn a U.S. Air-Foree C130 Hero.iles
transport, killing the six men aboard, and
then shot down an Army UHl rescue
helicopter at the scene, wounding three
men aboard.
The U.S. Command also reported two
other aircraft lost in the stepped up
fighting.
While Viet Cong units carried out a new
terrorist campaign in the Mekon1 Delta
far to the south of Saiion, mi litary
spoke smen reported a new 4,000-man
Am'eri::an offensive in the Khe Sanh area
-Operation Utah Flat, which began
June 12 and has killed 161 communists at
a loss of • 28 Americans killed and 80
wounded.
U.S. Mar:ines involved in the operation
One mile south of Khe Sanh added to the.
toll early today by setting up an ambush
trap'Outside their base'perimeters.
A spokesman. said a platoon of *ines
opened "fire on CommuniJts they saw
sneaking toward the base, alerting their
colleagues inside. The leathernec.U then
rettuted .back inside the peri~~o
ada !heir firepower to the baUlf. ·'l'lie
Communists killed three Americans 'ahd
wounded 13 but lost 44 dead in the attack
which failed to breach the defenses.
In the latest round of fighting t h e
Communists shelled 15 allied bases and
Vietnamese towns during the night.
Casualties were reported negligible, but
the new terrorism in the Mekong Delta
took a heavier toll.
Arab Commandos
Blow Pipelines
In Daring Raid
By United Press JnternaUonal
· Arab commandos in their most dariilg
r~ since end of .~ June 1967 w~ blew
\IP lour 12-lnch oil pipelines fn the liraell
port of Halra today, setting fires that
blazed for hoW'll. The tempo of fig:hlinc
along the Suez Canal increased and there
were air artillery and land battles.
An Israeli spokesman in Tel Aviv said
Israeli jets shot down an Egyptian MIG in
a dogfight over the Gulf of Suez. An
Egyptian spokesman reported an Israeli
plane shot down In the fight and said
Egyptlan commandos wiped out an
Israeli army base across the canal, kill·
ing 22 men.
Liberty bad to wal~ for some hours In
Austero's office while sheriff's in-
vesUgators and district attorney's <if-
ficers got their signals uncrossed. He was
then rushed to Orange County Medical
Center where he will be held pending the
setUng of a court hearing.
. It ,..., at a~ourt l>eatini· ~''!!~lt> aro !hat the ni(ht ~of Ubertyi/om 'th•
Norwait facility was first made public.'
Qeputy District Attorney Al W~Jt con·
demned tlMt carele&aness of' Norwalk
authorities for allowing 11a dangerous
man like Liberty to walk away ftom hi!
ward in such a ridicu10U1iy easy man~
ner."
Wells later dismissed hospital protests
that Liberty's release was occasioned by
a "clerical error." The angry prosecutor
accused the hospital or s t a m p i n g
"discharged" on the records of patients
who had actually escaped from the faclli·
ly.
City Studies Ways to Pay
For Center Construction
Haifa is one o! Israel's major cities on
the Mediterranean 52 miles north of Tel
Aviv and the country's main port. Israeli
police said the commal).dos struck around
8 a.m., blowing up the four pipelines and
spilling 1,500 tons of blazing fuel.
Firemen fought the blaze with foam for
four hours before they brought it under
cnntrol, but minor fires blazed for hours
afterwards, witnesses reported. Police
and troops cordoned off the area and
began a search for a group of men seen
near the pipeline before the blast.
Liberty got the label "candlelight
killer" from officers who in vestigated the
bizarre slaying of Mrs. Mar~lla Land is,
the attractive brunette who shared his
apartment at 8382 Westminster Ave.,
Westminster,
Officers said they found Liberty on
June 4, 1966, strumming his guitar and
softly singing while the body of his
paramour lay draped across a living
room sofa. Astonished officers noted that
Liberty had set burning candles all
around the body of his alleged victim.
City Councilmen Monday night ex-
plored with two firms the means to finan-
ce construction of a $6 million civic
center and after more than three hours
of discussion asked the city administrator
for a written recommendation on how the
new center should be financed.
The council heard the city's newly ap-
pointed architect. Kurt Meyer, discuss
his scope of services as the designer for
the new administration and police
facilities to be built at Main Street and
f\.1ansion Avenue on a 12·acre site.
Although he is not yet under contract to
the city, Meyer said he will propose a fee
which will be a percentage of the amnunt
budgeted for the center and later a flat
fee based on the construction cost
estimates.
Cou ncilmen also heard from George
Dickerson of the William J. Moran Co .•
general contractors, and [rpm Leon
Valley Driver
Faces Gun Charge
A Fountain Valley car salesman was
jailed early today after two policemen
allegedly chased the JUSpect down and
found him .anned, ~net he illleg'!fly
drove by a doughftut .shop ·where they
were stopped.
Gary R. Jewett, 25, of 18676 Markham
St., was booked into Costa Mesa City Jail
on suspiCion of drunken driving and car·
rying a concealed we3pon.
Newport Beach Police · Sgt. Don
Burdsall and Reserve Officer Robert
Duncan said they finally stopped Jewett
in the 1500 block ot Ne!fPOrl Boulevard
about 3 a.m. and ' called Costa Mesa
police for aid.
They sald the suspect was drivi ng south
In northbound lan es of the divided
boulevard, but they headed him off by us-
ing the o1d Newport Boul~vard frontage
road.
Patrolman Duncan to1d Costa Mesa
police he found a loaded .22 caliber
automatic on the seat of Jewell's
car while the motorist was being ques-
tloned.
Norman, representing finance firms .
Dickerson said his company would
oversee preparation for bidding and take
the bids from subcontractors and then
oversee the actual building much as a
general contractor wou.ld do.
He said that at present he could not tell
the council how much the services of his
company would cost, only that "it will be
a fair fee ."
Norman said his company would
charge the city no fee, making its profit
from resale of bonds. He suggested a
non.profit corporation to issue the bonds
which would be repaid from the city's
general fund or from a special levy to
repay the bonds.
His company would purchase the bonds
from the city, "thus guaranteeing a
buyer, something not possible today when
placing bonds on the open market."
The two companies teamed to finance
and build the Costa Mesa civic center and
are ·involved now with the La Habra
center.
Councilmen asked City Administrator
Doyle Miller to make a recommendation
on financing the center. Presumably the
rouncil will order financing steps upon
presentation of Miller 's report.
Police sources said they found one
unexploded charge of explosives near the
si te of the blast and rounded up several
dozen Arabs in their dragnet. The 1ite of
the explosion is about 13 miles below the
heavily guarded Lebanon border and 33
milts west of the Jordanian and Syrian
borders.
Arab guerrillas blew up a section of the
American-owned Trans-Arabi8n Pipeline
(TAPLINE) .May 31 at a spot where it
crosses Israeli-occupied Syri8.n territory
on the way from Saudi Arabia to oil
tenninals in Lebanon. About 8,000 tons
spilled into the Sea of Galilee, Jsraers
main water supply, and lhe lsraeli
government closed the pipeline. -
. T"-Cairo, western diplomats said that
what at first appeared to be routine Suez
Canal Incidents seemed to be snowballing
out of control.
Also in Cairo, the Palestine Armed
Struggle Command 11aid guerrillas from
Al Assifa, the miltiary arm of Al Fatah,
were responsible for the raid on the
lsraeli oil refinery pipeline.
Sti~king Ne~k Out
Will Glue Hold Guillotine?
LONDON (UPI) -Michael Booty stak-thr:~gh Booty's neck "like a butcher's
cd bis life today on his company's new kni(e .gQi,oi ~ough ~ piece of steak.'' 1 · The btl!:"J .. i.:.ld ~,·Joe-· f~ctllad "Power g ue. • l"I':"~ ~ •• "'' Booty, 27, will place his head Jn a Pac~ ~~ lt• manufa~ra, DOrdcn
gi;iliollne ·ln the chlimber of horrors at Clli)!\lcats ~td., cl1iln It i.:lii~·i(rqnaes\
Both Liberty and the strangled victim
had long rerords of mental illness and
both had been diagnosed and treated in
the mental ward of Orange County
Medical Center. Both, it was later
discovered, had made several unsuc·
cessful suicide attempls.
Liberty was sent to Atascadero after a
Superior Court judge ruled that the
Westminster man was insane and unable
to assist in hi3 own defense.
He ls today regarded as sane by
Atascadero and Metropolitan S t a t e
Hospital officials.
Tot Saves Family
-From Home Fire
The sleepwalking tendencies of a 2-year-
old Cypress boy probably saved the Jives
of his parents and four other children
early Monday morning, County Fire
Department officials said ·today.
Thomas Richards wand ered from his
bedroom early in the morning and his
brother Anthony Jr., 3, searched for him.
He found the house filled with smoke and
awakened his parents.
His father, Anthony Richards, said
young Thoma1 was found In the Jiving
room, still asleep, after thm other
children had been taken from the.burnin1
home ,
The fin:· department was catled but the
flames were subduea before they arrived,
Firemen found the home filled w I t h
smoke from the bll2:e which they think
started from defective wiring ln a
refri&erafor, I ,
Oaniage was est)mated at·$t ,300' to the
·home at 5325 Vista Real. · ' 1Madame'TUssaud 's Watwork!l·tonight'. gtue.'ln \#''YP,r.kt.'* ' ·: 1 ' ·, •
The guillotine has been altered so 'that ·, "Our'~eers.say it fS· 99_:1,_91i'ctnt s•.Oelc 'M•rlteil
Its razor·sharp blade Is suspended bf. a cmaln \he giue Will ,hold.~' ~' .. Id,. . • .
rope which has been cut and rejoinci:I by 'bra ·ety, "BeJ!eve, ,me !f'1J wait!\> ~ . .
the new glue. : , :~ ~fl~t. l'WOJ!kln't 'be do)JJ~l. •• 1 ~ '. • • ~ NEW Y,OJU( ('AP) -,-be Sk\Ck m1r~et
U the (lue holds lhe blade shQuld end • ~ty'1 -,. ) I e SJll""'l~· 26, •i!l' lili~ l\l"l"d}• a.wlnnin( pe~onn'n~ ~Y -;:
its deadly plwt(e just above l!<>olY'• ~re!Cr1 no(, ;to watch itid ~II ~ a· rarhy,' durln1> roceill we<b ol"•harp
neck. • .· ·i -~il!lth~ f1mq9,l~-:(lldfcta~gh\U;~ • decl!J>e ~1 wtUi J b,rok&'S : credillntl: ·a
If II d0ts not hold, a 1pok~'f(tf; I .R!il)!'nr111d)l.ei1Uivtlmund4ii1~.> l\Mhiltcal·<~Uy°-llm ,'lho ldvw;e .. (S..
M•dame TusS8ud 's said the bla , iir1oo,ooo pot1Dtl'; '(tzle;eee).' · t·· c-r· 'l,uotationJ, 'rag .. tll'tt ). • • · l ' • ~ -••• ,. ; -I •;
Superior Court which brought the Larwin
development grinding to a halt.
He was joined in his -cc;iurt battle by
Councilman John Harper and F.dward
Just, who also opposed the small kil,a,
some of which were to . be. only 1;~
square feet. ·
•
KILLED IN VIETNAM
Pfc Paul R. Rosa
FuneralSlateil
For Beach, GI
Nilled iii War
Funeral services for Anny Pfc Paul
R. Ross, 20, of 16762 Irby Lane, Hunting-
ton Beach, who died last week in Vil!!-
riam action, will be conducteC at I p.m.,
Thursday, in the Peek Family Chapel,
Westminster. Burial will follow in the
Good Shepherd Cemetery.
Pfc Ross graduated f r o m Fountain
Valley High School in 1967, where he had
played varsity baseball. He enlisted in
the Army Nov, 28, 1963. and had been
in Vietnam one month when he died.
Survivors Include his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. James R. Ross of the Irby Lane
address; a sister, Pamela, of the borne,
and his grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Adams of Wyoming.
Beach Council
To Interview
Landseapers
Landscape · architects to design the $6
million in park project's in Huntington
Beach will be interviewed by the City
Council" tontght beginning at 7:30 .o'clock
in council chambers.
The city recently was au_thorize.d by
the voters to sell $6. mi.Ilion. in -gene:at
obligalion bonds to finance an extensive
park program including a large central
city park.
Several firms have been interviewed
by the Recreation Department screen·
ing committee. .
Five firms had been in the running,
but one, Linesch and Reynolds of Ulng
Beach, withdrew . ~hen the city an·
nounced the. hiring of Tom Severns to
oversee parlF development. Severns has
been coMected with the f!nn in the past.
Orange Coasi
Weather
The sun may poke hi s sleepy
head through the clouds for a ~it
longer on Wednesday as the Or·
ange Coast eiipoyS tempera'tures
in the lower 70's.
INSIDE TODA\'
Sen. Johil Schmit.t' sez class
control legl$14tlon, which let.t
l)Clrenu decide if their 11oung·
sters wilt t.ake the co141se, has
passed cndcial hurdle. See StonJ
Page 3. ,
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:! DAI LV PILOT II
South Viets
C~deCong
On Pullout
PAlllS (UP!l -A South Vietnamese
official said today the Viet Cong are
"putting the cart before the horse" In
their rtported agreement to wilhdraw
troops from Cambodia once the fla:hting
11tops ln Vietnam.
The Cambodian chief of state. Prince
Norodom Sihanouk, announced Saturday
the \"iet Cong had promised him In writ·
ing to withdraw all their troops from
Cambodia ooce the war was over.
The pledge would be the first time the
Viel Cong formally bad admitted the
presence of Communist forces in cam.
bodia. •
But a responsible Sooth Vietnamese of-
ficial said today : "If the Communist
troops are still in Cambodia, peace will
never return. The presence of Communist
troops in Cambodia arxl South Vietnam
as well as Laos is the cause of the war."
On the report! of the pledge made to
Sihanouk, he said: "This Is putting the
cart before the horse."
The allied position taken at the Viet-
nam peace talks, now in their 23rd week,
has been that the withdrawal of Viet
must be part of an eventual peace deal.
The Communists have n e v e r
acknowledged allied claims that Viet
Cong forces from Cambodia and Laos
border sections of Cambodia and Laos as
staging mas.
Rites Conducted
For OV Teacher
Mrs. Sherwin
Funeral servlcu for Hazel Elizabeth
Sherwin, 46, an Ocean View School
District teacher who died June 19 after a
Lu Vegas auto accident, were held at 1
p.m. today at Dilday Brothers Chapel 1n
Huntington Beach. ·
Mrs. Sherwin and her husband, Jack,
were returning from 1-Las Vegas trip,
when they were struck broadside on U.S.
91 south, on June 14 by another car which
ran a red light at Tropicana Avenue on
the Strip, according to the Nevada
Highway Patrol.
After four days in West Memorial
llospit.al, Las Vegas, Mrs. Sherwin died
from injuries rea:ived when she was
ejected from the car by the itnpac
ejected from the ca r by the impact.
She had been a leac:Mr of third grade
classes at Star View School since 1964
and was scheduled to teach there again
neJt year.
Survivors incfllt4e her husband, of ~1-
Seven Seas Lan e, Hunlington Beach ; two
sons, David and JOhri or the home, and a
daughter Mrs. Carolyn Morton; her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chrstian Hansler
()f Anaheim, and one grandchild.
Bwial was at F<ll'est Lawn Cemetery
in Cypress.
Woman in Trunk
During Car Cras1i
WAPPlljGERS FALLS, N.Y. (UPI) -
It was Lynne Harbison'&: car, and she was
tht only one in it when it hit the parked
car.
But she wasn 't exactly driving il A! a
matter'of fact, she was in the trunk aL
the time.
Mrs. Harbison, 27, a housewife from
nearby H()pewel\ J unction, told police she
parked her car in a friend's driveway and
was removing a playpen from the trunk
when the car began to roll backward.
Sbe jumped into the trunk to avoid
being hit-and the trunk slammed down,
locking her inside.
The car r()lled down the driveway,
across the street and slammed into a
parked car. On impact, the trunk lid
()pened and Mrs. Harbison emerged unin-
jured.
DAil V PILOT
OlANGI co.n PIJILISHINO CCMt-AH't
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Tu..i.r, June 24, 1969
OALlY PILOT SttH P~tfl
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S NEIGHBORHOOD YOUTH CORPS
Alex Hinojo5a, 16 (left), and Alfred Sanchez, 17
Payoff for Parks
NYC Program Aids Valley, Youths
By TERRY COVJ.LLE
Of lltt 0.llJ P'llel 11•11
The best trimmed tree is one that ha rd·
ly looks trimmed.
That's just one of many tips lWo young
men from Colonia Juarez hai>e lea rned
while working with the Fountain Valley
Parks Dep artment un~r the
Neighborhood Y()uth Corps proft,am.
Alex Hinojosa, 16, and Alfred Thomas
Sanchez, 17, both say the fede rally-sup-
ported program has provided them with
one of the most challenging summers
they've ever had.
Neither youth ,is a stranger to W()rk -
Alex has been a gardener's helper and
A1fred sanded OOats -but both had
S()fl\ewhat of a bleak outlook for work op-
portunities this summer unlil they ran in·
14 an NYC representative .at the 'ColQnia
Juirez Community Center.
"Now we're city employes," says
Alex.
They began working last February, bul
only afternoons while school was in
session. Now they work fulltlme, under
the supervision of Henry Agonia, field
boss of the park crew.
NYC is a federal pr()gram to find jobs
and training for youth up to the age of 18.
The government pays 90 percent of the
cost, as Jong as another agency -in this
case the city ()f Fountain Valley -
provides the work and supervision.
In f()unla in Va\!ey Alex and Alfred are
the only two workers, but Agonia has
been so pleased with their eff()rts he
plans to ask for the add ition of three
more youths in the near future.
"I'm pleased with the wh()le program ."
says Ag()nia, "maybe these two are ex-
ceptional, but I'd like to try some more."
Alex works with the tree trimming
crew. "I only pick up the loose brush and
limbs," he says. "but I've learned a lot
about trimming trees."
Alfred sees more of the parks in his
capacity as mower and planter. "I never
did this kind of work before," he e1:-
plains. "and if it weren't for this job I'd
probably just be loafing now."
Their goal is perhaps permanent work
with the city in· the parks department,
and Agonia believes they can make the
jump.
"It's been real good training for them,"
he says.
The program is run at liUle cost to the
city. Supervisi()n is the primary re·
quirement and Henry Agonia puts in a lot
of time to that end, but he has the
respect of both boys who ' label him
"tops''.
Pay rate Is about $1.40 per hour.
Not overwhelming. but a h>l more than a
boy can earn sitting on a street corner. A
1naximum or 32 h()urs W()rk per week is
alSCl placed on all NYC workers ..
Girls are eligible too, and the city Is
thinking about training a young secretary
or clerk's aide under the program.
Alex sums up the experience like this,
"!l's just the right kind of work f()r me.
And I get a Jot m()re out of it than just
hours and money."
Charge Dropped Against
All-nude Santa Ana Bar
Contempt charges against a Sant.a Ana
bar at which all-nude entertainment had
been banned were dismissed Monday
when the di strict attorney's o!ficc refused
to press charges.
Cleared by Superior C()urt Judge
Claude Owens was the Apartment (no
conneclion with the Apartment A·GO-G()t,
a ~lain Street tavern which faces trial
'1-'ith four ()ther watering places ()n
charges (If featuring OOtt()mless en·
tertainment.
perfonners will be covered In the low
pelvic area in the time preceding trial.
Lining up with them when the trial date
Is se"t will be representatives of the
11orbor Inn. La Habra, the Country Girl
No. 2, Anaheim and the Vampire Room,
Santa Ana.
Many of the entertainers who put ()fl
their bottomless shO\\.'s at the bars have
been heavily fined with the alternative of
lengthy prison stays. Among them is
Carol Cybulski. 32, of Laguna Beach, who
drew a $5,000 fine ()r 500 days in jail for
her torrid, "Hey Jude" belly dan cing at
the 'Apartment A-Go-Go.
-..
Columnist Pegler Dies~
•
Vitriolic Writer Cited for Exposing. Rackets.
TUCSON. Ar~. <UPI) -Weotbrook
Pegler, Pulitzer Pri.te winning Columnist
known for hiJ scathing verbal usaults on
some of the great figures in hist()ry, died
today at the age of 74.
Death came at 2:30 a.m. 201. at St.
Macy's Hospital where the ttaggy-brow-
ed, fiercwyed writer was admitted about
three weeks agb.
The cause of de•th was not announced
but it was known that Pegler had suf.
fered from stomach ~r in recent
years.
At Qne time Pegler's column appeared
in 186 newspapers and he was reported to
have accumulated a milUon dollars. He
retired to ttis home here about five years
ag(),
At the height of his career, Pegler had
a gift for. vituperation lhat many fd\ was
unri valed ln modern tbnes. He feuded
with some ()f the greats of his day and
minced no words in describing them.
Presidents were often targets for his
verbal shots. Franklin D. Roosevelt was
"Moose.jaw." Harry Truman was a "thin-
lipped hater." Truman ~untered by call·
ing the columnist a "guttersnipe.''
In 1941 Pegler won the Pulitzer Prize
for his expose of laOOr racketeers and
one ()f them ruefully commented he'd
been "Peglerized ."
Hii critical faculty was always sharp
and he wa.s alert to expose phoniness in ,
all walks of life.
Pegler was known as a loner and had
few close friends. He was married early
in his career to Julia Harman of
Memphis, Tenn. She died in' Rome in
1955. In 1959 he married fear! W. Doane.
They were divorced in 1961. Later that
same year he married Maud Towart and
she was with him at his death.
James Westbrook Pegler, OOm ()0 Aug.
Valley School
Leaders Picked
For Institute
f()untain Valley School District educa-
tiona l leader Rober t J. Lindstrom has
been selected to participate in the fourth
annual Institute for the Development of
Educational Activities program.
He will attend a one-week session for
school administrators at Mills College.
Oakland. The dates will be ann<lUJlced
later this summer.
The maj()r topics ()f discussion will be
how to deal with the mounting problems
of student actil-'ism and curriculum
relevancy.
Lindstrom, Who has !IUVed as principal
of Arev1los School l9f si1-years, was
among 400 1educatoiil ~ .the
Un.1f1i.J¥a~ t.o be &eiectei!. for t h e
wor'!"I' program. ~ • •
Boy Kills Older
Bl'other in Tiff
OAKLAND (UPI) -A 15-year-0ld bqy
killed his 19-year-old br()ther Monday
night v•ith a shotgun blast, according to
police.
Officers said the slain youth, Robert
Jefferson. and hi s younger brother.
Reginald, had quarreled moot of the day
over an undisclosed subject.
Reginald, police said, picked up his
father's 16 gauge shotgun and said ,
"Come ()Ulside if yo u're not chicken."
Robert was hit with a blast in the chest
in front of the house. Two sisters were in·
side, but the parents were absent.
Reginald was taken t() juvenile hall.
Britons Pay Tribute
To Ear1 Alexander
WINDSOR. England (AP) - A 19·gun
salute thundered over the battlements of
Windsor Castle tOOay as Britain bade
farewell to one of her greatest S()ldiers,
Field Marshal Earl Alexander of Tunis.
The body of the 77-year-old World War
II commander was carried to the castle
on a gun carriage pulled by seven black
horses. Troops lined the route. and many
of AJexander's war veterans wept in the
somber cro-.·ds.
'·
UPI Te..,.._
'30' FOR COLUMNIST
We stbrook Pegler Die•
2, 1894, foll owed in his father's footsteps .
His father, Arthur James Pegler. was a
newspapennan in Minneapolis and later
in Chicago.
\Vhen he was 16 years old, Pegler took
a job as an ()ffice OOy in the Chicago
bureau of the United Press, la ter UPI.
During the Republican National Con--
NEW MAN AT-THE HELM
Weapons St1 tlin1s Jewett
vention of 1912, h9wever, he got 1 j()f
with the International News Service,
heJping its experienced men cover the
event. He returned to the United Pre~
and worked in Chicago, Des M()lnes, Ne~,.
York and ·Dallas.
In 1916, the United Press sent him w,.,
London as a special correspondent, and•'-
year later he was accredited as a war
correspondent with the American Ex~ •
pediti()nary Force in France. Pegler -had ·
a series ()f controversies with censorsr
admiral!, gern!I'als and others during hi!
London assignment. After the armisti~ .
he returned to the United States and wa,s
spc1rts editor of the morning service Of~
the United Press fr()m 1919 to 1925.
He recalled once that during his Lori~:
don days he talked to the famed cor·.
respctndent Floyd Gibbons, who said h~
had eliminated the middle initial "P.''
from his byline, because he thought it
"cluttered it up." Pegler said GibboM ·
advised him t() drop the byline h~ was
then using of "J. W. Pegler." GibboM \
t()Jd him that a "Pullman-car" name'.'
such as "Westbrook," would be bettel'•
remembered. Pegler adopted it. 1 '
Under that byline he became famou~f·
first as a columnist f()r the New Y()rk
World-Telegram , wriling "Fair Enough,''
a column which was syndicated by United :
Feature Syndicate to 180 newspape rs.
Pegler reached his peak in the early·
194()'s. In 1941, he won a Pulitzer Prize ·
for his campaign against labor uniott"
racketeers. ,,
He "Peglerized" George Scalise, presi-
dent of the Building Service Employe11
Internati()nal Union, with the ullimat•
result that Scalise was sent to prison f()r-
10 to 20 years after conviction for forgery
and embeulement.
RETIRING AFTER 30 YEARS
Weapon5 Station's Simpson
..
'
..
Capt. Jewett Takes Over ·
Naval Station Command
Capt. Eugene H. Simpson will tum ovtr
command of the U.S. Naval Weapons Sta-
tion, Seal Beach, lo Capt. Frederick F.
Jewett, II, during ceremonies at 10:30
a.m., Monday.
Capt. Simpson is retiring from the Navy
after 30 yea rs of service. lfe assumed
command of the weapons station on Aug.
26, 1966, following a t()ur of duty with the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Washington. D.C.
Capt. Je,\.'elt has recently retu rned
from a 14-monlh tour in Vietnam. where
he was plans off icer for the U.S. Military
Assistance C()mmand, Saigon.
A veteran of \Vorld War II, retiring
Capt. Simpson has been decorated fo r
nine Pacific campaigns and has received
the Bronze Star and the Joint Staff Com·
mendation ?tfedal.
On retirement he plans to work on the)
staff ()f Guide Industries in Sun Valh:y.
Capt. Simpson, with his -.·ife and family,
v.·ill life in Northridge.
The new commander graduated from
the U.S. Naval Academy in 1947. He is a
Korean War .. veteran.
Kidney Patie1it
Susa1i Keeps Up
Fight for Life
lt has been alleged that the Apartment,
like the Apartment A-Go-Go, defied the
court order by again pulling ()n its stage
all-nude performers. But pr<>Secutors ex·
plained that the bottom dropped out o(
the case last week when Apartment A·
Go-Go manager llarry Maselli was
cleared or the charges.
Press Gets Preview
Susan Maize's long right for life went
into its fourth week today as anxious·
Orange C()unty ?tledical Center doctors
and nurses maintain a round the clock
vigil over the 17-year-old k id n e y
transplant patient.
Today's bulletin listed the condition of
the high school girl as •·critical", the
diagnosis that has been the unfailing
verdict of her surgeons for the past two
weeks. ''General systemic problems and
major complications in the lungs are not
improving," the rep<>rt adds.
Dismissal carries with II, however. the
proviso that the bar mus t not allow its
female entertainers to "defy the spirit ()f
the ()rder" by wearing mi sleading In-
novations in certain areas of the body.
Both bars have guaranteed that their
Oriental Sought
•
In Burglal'y Tl'y
An Oriental who wasn't as lracrutable
as they're cracked up to be is the subject
of an attempted burglary report filed
with sheriff's officers by a Laguna Niguel
woman.
The 19-year-old homeowner to 1 d
deputies she was taking a nap Sunday
afternoon when she heard a noise at the
window. When ihe drew the shades to in·
vestigate she saw a man she described as
an Oriental about five-foot-six and wear·
in« a bandald on one arm.
He wu, she told officers, busily tn·
gaged In prying the window.
She said that when he saw her, he look·
ed surprised, then IJ8Ve a "Channing
amlle," shrugged his shoulders and ran
to a waiting car.
Masters Pageant Unveiled
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 Ille OtllY Piie! Sltrt
The wink of flash bulbs and the purr or
time exposures Monday night heralded
the 34th coming ()f Laguna's first lady -
the Pageant of the Masters.
i\nns akimbo with photograph I c
paraphernalia, the work ing pre ss
clustered close to the source of the magic
jn woodsy Irvine Bowl.
Their light meters measured the In-
tensity of illusions, art from the ages
recreated in life size,
For the public. the stx weeks of "living
pictures" begin July 11 and end Aug. 24.
Preview night is July 10 whe~ the fully·
programmed first performance raises Its
curtains on 26 subjects.
Pageant PrOOucer Don Williamson
Monday night unveiled sii of his Illusions
to the eye of the camera. They range not
only through time but this year even take
on space.
Al America's astronautJ land on the
moon in July, the Pageant will have its
counterpart, "'nit~ lA>n.gest Step" painted
by Norman Rockwell.
One of the astrtV1auts depicted, John
Young, recenUy m'ade space history in
the close lunar orbit.
The painting was technically difficult to
create because ()f Its tremendous amount
(){ detail, gauges, instrumentati()n, tubes
and wiring. It depicts two astronauts
suiting up.
Given body by an ()rchestra and lhe
narration of Hap Graham a!S() draws
strength rrom Its programming as loca·
lions are shifted from the main stage to
the SO foot upper stage to the woodsy
hillside.
One ()f the works presented by
\Villiamson was part ()f a creation show·
ing OOth the Pink Period and the Blue
Period ln the artistic life of Pablo ·
Pica!so.
'"l'he Dispossessed" will be shown be·
side Picasso's ''The Tragedy" from his
blue period.
Another that Is sure to be a crowd
pleaser ls the Pageant creatioo of "The
}tocket Thrower" a work that stood 45-
feel high at the New York \Vorld's Fatr or 1964-6l.
I•
In a difficult pose. Robert Mock of
Manhattan beach is stopped in motion as
he. bunches his muscles to hurl the
missile skyward.
"Children By The Sea" shows the
warm coloni and light of American Im·
pressionist Edward Henry P()tthast ln a
typical America n beach scene.
Frederic Remington 's "The Smoke
Signal" Is sharp In detail and color con·
trasts, a scene of American Indians.
One of the most vivid contrasts un-
veiled by Williamson was the old and the
new Olympic Awards. It Is two subjects.
One a modern Gold Medal like the one
won by Lagunan Bill Toomey in the 1968
decath1on In P.iexlco City.
The ()\her award ls a decorative vase of
the type given wiMers ()f the original
games held every four years at the plain
of Olympia In Elis, Greece.
The 26 &ubjects in this year's Pageant
wlll be about 80 percent new with three
favorites from last year repeated and, of
coorsc, the traditional closing repeat,
da Vinci's ''Last Supper."
•
Doctors state that the left kidney they ,
grafted into Susan from her m()ther, ?tirs.~
Florence Mazze, 42. is functlonin11
perfectly. fler critical conditk>n stems
from post operative complications that
are apparently defying tberapy.
Pendleton Brig
Brawl Hurts 26
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -One
guard and 25 prisoners were treated for
injuries after a brawl Sunday nigh\,
between Inmates at the Camp Pendletoa..
Marine Base brig, officials reported f.foft.,
day. _.
The guard and one prisoner ttqulttd
hospltaliu.tlon, but names of the Pttarines
inv()lved were not released. ·
The: fight was between white and Neero
prisoners ln • compound used by 250 In·
mates, ofncials said. Not an of the in-
mates took part and there was no at.-
tempt to brtak out, they said. -
,.
' •
-----~~ .. ·~-· .... .. -----. .:.~---~---..-.::.~. ~ ..... .... . . ..
'Rainbow~ Never Doll
·ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER .
ADUl.TS $1'5-JUNIOU $1-ILDllN -12 -
Crossword Puzzle
ACRO~
1 Mlntral
springs
5 Cicattlr 9 Stepped off
l4 "-and
tush !"
115 Eiccellent:
Z words
{16 Silt up emoUonal Ir.
Obs.
b.7 Canadian
province;
Abbr. ha Facts
ti9 lt.all&o-
1 born actress
1U Not bemmed ,,
122 Irish
county
1
2.f Thotouohf.-es
26 -PanlMrs 127 Gibbon
28 Caused to
1
29 frttcle
32 Stilt of
t.. suffering t-'5 TV progru.: 2 words 37Tht-of
March
38 Canln1
39 Appro1tbt~
40 Beach 4) Oregon !alee
"5 Pitch 46 GretdJ
' l
47 IJ111phe's dec ision 411 Wei ght
allowance
49 Marting at
rando•
Ynttfday's Panle Solftd:
53 Gear
57 Tille of courtesy
58 Hitter of 61
home f\UIS 59 T0tpor
61 Underdone
62 Having 111ucb In common
63 At the pta«
64 Noun ending: &5 Fix In a dllf1rent
position
66 Made a loan
&7 Legal paper
COIN
11 Feminine
name
12 At IRJ
U111e
13 Refuse to approve
21 Pttlod of
li111e l Prepares 23 Measure-
for a fight 25 Strain
2 Master m1rlltt't 21 Twisted
3 us pioneer 29 Pronoun
In the China 30 Hab itat
Trade 31 Kind ~f
4 Brazen conl&loet
5 Downcast 32 Haze
6 Garments 33 Final
7 Opposed product of a COOle bact _ _reason
tnto vie• 34 Bura
9 Artist's 36 l ldely
accessory sep11aled
10 At the point 31 Involving of death: cartful
Archaic Judg11ent
6/24/69
41 Fixed ht , rigidity
.t2 Across
43 Ta it
amorously
44 Dirt road
fe atu"s 48 Vehicle, of a sort: lnfor111al
49 Malevolent
supematural
being
50 Empty-headed
510ftht j
Norwegians
52 Ctlpldlty
53 Historic
..... tenbllatet
54 Low-lying
tract 55 Att1o! sister
56 Prtforni a civic duty
60 Llttly ,.--,,,..........,.,..,,,....,
·Joining Cast
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
•Royal Dano and Richard
Mulligan have been added to
the cast or "The Undefeated"
starring John Wayne and Rock
Hudson on location In Baton
Rouge, La .
'CAMELOT' DESIGNER
Si.phen Goldmon
Mesan Does
Sets, Lights
In 'Camelot'
Costa Mesa's S t e p h e n
Goldman, new resident set
designer tor South C:O..t
Repertory, ia ~eating the
scenic and lighting effects for
the musical "Camelot" at the
Rio Hondo Music Theater in
Whittier.
Goldman, whose credits In-
clude all form s of theater
from happenings to full opera,
is a graduate of Brandeis
A unique sdlolanhlp qr,.. peared with the F~ lee (Va.) the ....,.ry ,,.. the malnolop
menl with the Arrpy ;.. paying Players, a community the1ttr production of uTll't.Uffe'' arid
off for four former servicemen group _sponsored by the Anny "lnlel'IJ\mo ... He 1lto was
u well as theaterpn al Sptdal Services. Jn 11115 he asatstant stq:e mMapr for
C.llfornl1 State Col 1 ea: e, won lhe 2nd Army tn-"Olivtr!"
Fullerton. tertalmnent cotitelt f o r Fiilo, who atuditd 1 l
The Army Enterlalnmtnt dr1matlc re1dlng. He alao did . Pasadene. ,PIJyhouJe Collect
Scholarships and A w a rd s more Ullin 20 shows at Anny ol Theater Arts for three
Program (AESAP) screens and Air Force hues in years before comJ.ni to CSCF
t1lented servicemen and the. Germany. to earn a decree, completed
collea:e provides f I n a n c I al Paul and Fazio, both of requtrementa for the B.A. Jn
wlstance to those chosen. whom came to CSCF in 1966, January of ·llel: Whtie at the
uAESAP provides us with are graduates in drama. Most co1lea:e, be received the senior
recent aJumnus ts Paul, who director's award fOr "The experienced people fr 0 m flnished his MA de--re--Brick and the Rose," and va~ paru of the world who ..---· desire to further 1 he l r qulrements last January alter performed, for the fif1t Ume, .1_ specializing ln theater desia:n. his orlginal one-man mime dramaw.; educaUon," says Dr. Among hls maey theater ac-show, 0 1 Shall Impenonate a
James D. Young, drama UvlUes at CSCP', he dest-d Man."
department chairman. ~=~§§s~~§·~ .. -::=='========,ll "'nlrough it, we have added1r
a healthy kind of maturity to
drama productions, thereby
benefiting the college, students
and theatergoers alike," he
says.
AESAP, sinci! It began al
CSCF in 11166, has brought
seasoned entertai ners Jack
Campbell, Ollie Nash, t.arry
Faz..io and Christopher Paul to
the campus.
Campbell, a Fullerton resi-
dent, participated in the Anny
entertainment program for
three years before coming th
CSCF last !all. He directed more than 20 plays i n
Germany and will direct
Bertolt Brecht's i.Threepenny
Opera" next fall as bis
master's thesis project.
bclnlYe , .... , Shewl11t
Mld0So1ttier. C.llt....i•
Jack Lemmon -· Catherfn t Deneuvt
Cll1rfQ l lfft' -l'.tw l •Wftlrll
M)'l'M Llf
111 • .... tic '-'-Y
"THE APRll FOOll"
Starts
Tomorrow
JUNE 25
Na.sh, of Placentia, came to
CSCF in 1967. He had ap-University with a degree in WMll.Myu 1,., • ,,,s
theater design. He recently ~·-• WIT 111a:a11 • 1n1 n CMtlll-• s.t. lllMll 1..,...y ~ f SCR' ~ ---designcu the set or s A1hni.1i....: 1:-. Mii 1ot11Ur1
P roduction ot 1'Room j .._....,.n..M a 1 .. ,_7k
S.lwMp M•tl-• Service." Adtlltt h.M QllllNI 1k
Directing the Lerner-Lowe
1
•-•1!\l'~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ll musical is Squire Fridell of · ~ I
Sunset Beach, l!leen recently In ~ IS:S:Nlli..t
SCR's "La Turlsta." Fridell's rtJC~LLI.,. 1
wife , Melanie. ls .&.C · I
choreographer for "Camelot." ~., I
TbeshowwillbestagedFrl-'m• '11111 day and Saturday, June 27 L>t.J_ 1
and 28, at' 8:30 p.m. in the PLUS
WhitUer High School auditor-
ium.
'Committee'
Coming to
Melody land
The original San Francisco
company of ' ' T h e Com·
mittee," the Bay City's most
celebrated satirical rewe, will
present this unique stage show
ot Melodyland the wee!f,fl Ju-
ly f.15. . •
Direcled by Alan !lrm lson,
"The Committee" opened in
San Francisco five yed'I ago
and has been recelVdd so
enthusiastically, it is now an
iMUtution there. ~
tt is best described 111 an
"'instant revue," since the ma-
jority of the topical satire is
ad-libbed, allowing no two
shows to be alike as its
performers cast their barbs at
everything from sex and
politics to integration and
censorship.
.... JM:lll ,;;;Wftiiiiol GtUION
•W TO COMMIT
ILUlllUoGE"
ria ···-· -
--· ............... _I __ .. ___ .
,_ ....... n__.li l
W .. t DfSNY'I
"THE HORSE WITH
THE GRAY
FLANNEL SUIT"
Aho
"THE GNOME MOBILE'1
CINEMA THEATER SOlD OUT .JONJGHTI
Long Boch Jewish Community Center Benefit
-Camponhlp Fun<4
A GIANT or A NOVll
COLUMBIA PIOTURE! PR .. •SN1'9
llllDU/DMll
•ID /lllllP . .
CARL FOREMAN'S \
MIC:llRl'l IDLD . 1!!1 I
...,, Sll'OI ~ .llQllCCIM ,,_ .....
-~
~~
... BALBOA 1111• FROM 2 P.M.
THE IRMTEBT
ENTERTBINMENT
VB LUE ''l-404• 11r~~~~:i1i OPE., flll ,,.. lllllllWNl •I rill1 ~ ~~ ~~ .. 1. . ; . 11'="""""""""'"""'"""'~11 16.!i DIC}J.u
e NOW -sNi iVi ~)J:~ NEW:~~;o~lg:t"'*
ltlCQl.I~-. ~; C-.. Mff U-y_,. ........ ~ I -Ends Tonight -"THE LOVES OF WLlllT' ''THE KILLING OF ISAOORA"
-AUO-
Peter Usllnov.Maggle Smith
Ka~ Malden
--
GEORGE JEAN
PEPPARD SEBERG -·
SISTER GEORGE" Alo•
led Itel'.., I•
''THE SERGEANT" IKk H•cllMI
1TAln WIDNISDAY "A FINE PAIR"
St1rt1 Wednnd1y
EXCLUSIVE
IN THE U.SJl.
~~
O:PENING TONIGHT
fOR A LIMITED ENC!AQEMEHI'
~.., f-w ,,_,.,
REVUE: PHASE U -BLACK/WHITE A 14 ---bl(•-flll
8TEWIE STONE
tiip Young Comtd'-1 dll"IOt from MllrYort
.IEANINE NAPOLl!ON
Supw~tred-Wwlc:o.t.~ .... . .,.J.,.,.. l ' TT'I' 1.,i 91_l,._• .. J. 'ill h.,-1--4-+~ I~~~~~~-~!!~ I '!mW TO CONNIT I 1 ~~CAC
Jack Lemmon and
Catherine Deneuve are
IUD CROll&IM ....... 114
Cook10lls-D-
Rl!tlll!RVAT10NS1 (71lll 772-7777
8HOWTIME8 ShOO AN0 ·11i00 i-.M,. 1'\.CSAAT.
SUNDAY AT. 9IOO
• ' '
BEST
Tht DAILY 'llOf •ff1rt t olfto
of flit b.tt foeh1t1t, by octi.111
t11,.,..., of r••''"• ,,,,i\,bM I"
011y 111wlpt,,.r iii tho 11otio11.
,
P111tt.ftMllt...,.,. 51_,. ,_,.._ ..
"FOR THE
LOVE OF IVY"
"The April rools" GRAND HOTEL
..
Th• Big Broadway
Mu1lcol Show
TUTS WIDNllDA'f
STARTS WEDNESDAY
f I IBUT or I l&aVll i • r C:Ol.\111•1 A PIC'n.IU• ..... ""'9.
"111'/.m.
• Cft..RL l"OREMAN!I I ........ IGLlll--.= ( ... ow--'Iii-
V 1neSS1 Redrjraye
'The Loves of Isadora' ................
''The lllu1tr1ted Man,.
STARTS WEONESDAY
"'""'"' hlty ,,.. 1 , ... Wllltlll. ---
1l'.CllEUr ----
PUT WH IN
YOUR POCKO
Seti unwanU!d lteml
with a DAILY PILOT
Claulllod Ad.
PHONI
6'2·5671
J
. ·-• . '
11 DAll.Y l'ILOT H T ...... y, June 24, 196t
I •
••
• "
/
~~---;;-:·:c;-~c.;-::::;.:;::o::::-::::r,:~_.r.:;,:-:~:::-:"':"'':'"':'"-:"0:-~":"::':"-:"=:<=:_:--:--~~~!!f"'ll~:'lllll!l".,"""'l!l~ll'll""""!lllll!lllllllllllllllll"llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll"llllllllll!llll!!llllllllllllllllllllllllllll"lllllllllllll!lllll'll'!!!!ll~
Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete
)
New
'" 11. ,.
" '" " • "' ,. •
" • • J " " ~ ~ '
TU11411, June 24 1969 H
York Stock Exchange List
American
• ' • ..
" .. "' " l~\11 " \ ' "' ' . l!'J •
.. '" .. " . " .. " ~~ '" ,t~
r.~ ••
Stock Exchange
.. .,,
.1 ' " ' " ll~ ' • " ,,
"' :: • ..
" " .. ~ " ' •
" . ~. . " . " . "' ' '
"l • ' l ~ " • ' " • ' ' ' -NO-: i~ ~
0 •• 1900 7l\.'i ·~ u •
431 ' ' ... 1B ~ to )l\lr
" " 1 14\11 ' nv. l I\• '~ J:\lr, 10 IS~ l M 0
21 '"" " . j s.,.
~ " . " : ~· 15 ' • . " 510 1t0
' n+. J\1CI 6 1 ,, ••
j '~. °"I 10
' " r?60 6t 79 ,. . ,. " . ' .. J.)f
~ ' y
" "
list
DAILY PILOT J,I
.... ... caa.1.-L-Nc•c-.
" •
•
•
JI OAll.Y PILOT TuesdU, J'"' 24, 1969
For The Record
Marriage
Licenses ,_,
lAWllEHl·WYNN, 0-ld II., U, or
.&,)II A....udo Avt. 1"'9 Vlt1lnl1 A.,
)ol, fll 11Ji, M.1rl9<11it Avt., llOlh d ,_ del Ml•.
ADVlllTISIMINT
Lose 10 lbs. In
10 days on
Grapefruit
Diet
HOLL YWOQO, CALIF.
ISpeci•ll. -Th is is th•
ravolution•ry 9r1pefruit
di•t that avaryone is sud-
denly telking •bout. l iter-
elly thousands upon thou-
sands of copies have been
pessec:l from hand to hand
in factories, plents end of.
fice5 throu9hout the U.S.
end Cenede,
Word of h1 WC(ft.I h11 1prud
llkt wlklrlr1. 8«1vu thb 11 lht
dltl ftNll rMl!y ~1. We IMYI
1 .. tlmonl1l1 In our flies rtporlln11
00! the llKC"I of 11111 diet. 11 \"OU
lollow II t•Klly, you l lloiild klit
10 POUl"llh In 10 dfys, T,,..,.t Wiii ... ,,. ""illh' Ion In t111 llrtl lour d•rs.
lllt 'f'llll Wiii 1\ldd.nly drpp 5 poundt °" the Jiii d•r. Tl>e•Hfl~ YOI/ will
lost ont POUnd 1 d1y 1,111j!I !ht IOlll
d1y. Then you will lose IV. -..cl•
.,,,.,. ._ c11r1 1111111 you 11t1 dG....,.
to y0ur pr-r weight. '"' of •II,
"""• wru H no hur>gtr Peno-. Now
r..,.!11d •r.d tnl<Jrge(l, 1hl1 new 01•1
pltn lftt ftlu 11ur1 ftlurt•ll wllh
lood1 11'1•1 ~•• formerly "lorbl'*'.,,,"
IUC:h 11 big ,,.,.~, lrlmml!d will!
111, •Oltl or frll!d chlcte.i, ricfl-
gr•vln, maVonnelJ.t, loD$!tr 1wlm-
mlng In built<, IMCO<I t<J!t, nuugn
•nd 1cr1mblfd tiggt. YllU t in H!
11<1!!1 'l'OU i re fuH, until 'l'OU c•nnor
POUlbly HI 1ny more. Ano 1:111
lost ID POUnd• In !tie llrll 1"'1 dtn
pl111 .,,, PO!lnd• ....... v lwa d•r1
lhtrHlltr un!ll YOI<• >Wight h do..,.
to nor"'401. Tht 1ecret Dffolnd lhl•
new "quid: -l9hf lot>'' ctie! 11
1lmplt. ~al dwl no! fGrm f1!. And
lilt' 1r1perrull luke In 1n11 new dltl •cl• II e Ct!tlnt /!hi "Tri9ger"I,
to lltrl l~ Ill burnl119 1>r11C111. You
111111 VoUfltlf on lf>t permltll!d ,_
lllttd In 11141 d id pl1n, Ind illl! IOlt
llflllOhUy ill Ind P tfll body
111/ldl.. Wiit!'! ""' ftl t nd bto.t •••
tont you wm c"'' lo IOif wel!ihl
Ind your -i9hl will renw1ln c-
111nl. A COPY of thl1 MW Ind l ?lrf•
llnoly 1uc:ctutul dill pl1n ctn IM
obt11ntd by 1enclln; 12 IO GRAPE·
FltUIT DIET PUBLISHERS, Sulrt
llM. Dtpl. J7., .. 1111 N. Hl9hl1nd
Ave,. ttollyWOOd, Ct!ll. 90ll2t. Money.
INicti: g111r1ntH. If .aller trying !ht
dlt! pltn 'fCIU hive nor 11111 J ,,,,..nc1,
In l1'1il llrJI 11ven d•ys, 1not,,.r '
ooundl In !ht ne~t 7 clays. lr.d 1111
POl/l'IO• every lwo dly• tllere•llt<,
t lmply retu•n 1>1e d•el pl•n Ind y...,r
11 will lie rehmdecl p•om1>U~ end
wolhout ••gumenr. Teer PUI !hit """"II' 11 • •eminaer. D«Ole no ..
IO rMjlln iht !rfm. 1r1rttllve tlg111t
of l'l)ur yoo.itll, W'llilt 1njo1lll';I ht•r·
11 l>rHklllli, luncllei Ind dln'lerl.
LUNOOREN·fl"F USE, l.trry R .. 27,
llt olQI Alllf'4lh THIJ$t encl (li:llMll> A .• :M, ot m Lo!Jf9ra. bolh 111 s.11 c...._i..
SHULTZ·GOOWIN JOlln C., ,,. of
1100 E. Collin>. Otentt Ind Judith
A., 25, ol m Pr-I, Nt WPGl"t
Beaai.
COAKLEY.l(ILLINGSWDRTH. Wtl!er
J., lt, of l'-IJI Morin SI .• WtJtmln·
1!1r •n<I The~ I., ll, of 2111 W.
"Nhurlt Plett, Senti AN.
BILL,TROM·SATTLER, Cll1rJe5 E.,
tt, of 210of Stmol Piece, Co•I• Mt11
I nd ~'°" L., 1•, of '10 N. Gi.u.ell, Dr•not.
WATl(INS.llJORNEllY, Mlrvln R .• lJ.
of JIJ E. IJTh Piece, C<11I• ........
encl SUiin, tl. of 7IO A.-..00. Cv-,_de! Mer.
MciCDRMICK·HEHDRICKSON, P1trlcll
J., n , of n1s 11-v.11 Lu11, L•
tulle Betd> tn4 S.Uwn E., tt, of loUJ w .... lmoncl. Ortllff,
$HEDARDVICK--NIEMCZAIC, P1i.r J.,
27, Ind Ctule °'·• 21, both of 72f
E. ltlh SI ., Cool1 MroM.
GR"$$E.VALERIO, Mlcll1tl H,. 20, of
ttll Enwreld Ave., end 5u1en M., tr. of "'1 1r0quol1 Rotll, t>o!t1 of
Weslminsler.
KRON1CIC-CAROON, Jontlhln II., :n.
of IU W. Fern Drive. Fullel'lon,r 1n<I
c11r1111~ c .. 21, of 202B O!ero, ,Mew
COl<rl, UC ln1~.
IUSM·SHELPON, De!lnl1 S., 30, 1nd
Ktlhletn, , .. both of ... Vk l«le,
Cotll Mew.
OICK·llEISNER, fl-Id C., U, of
Sl6 s. Vin Nn1, s.n11 Ant •ncl Mt<"ien U., $2. gf 4321 SfnlH Wty,
lrvlne.
IANDIOIUCl-WILLIAMS, Wltl!1m, .'H.
of 2l)Clt w. flobCf"!e Aw .• FUllffT<lll
incl Mery A •• 21, of :i..u ~ Bre.it
Lene. Corone de1 Met.
J OHNSDN·CUTTING, O.vld O., 11,
end Bonnie M., It, botll ol 6752
Humboldt, WHlm!mler.
F IGGE·HINTZ. Gh•rlH (., ?I, of
16111 Mtrlner Orlvt, Hunlfn~on
h1ch "'"' LJ~ L., 20, ot l5!t Feu1t~ LOft'll lle1t11.
JAMES·HALL. Rleflerd 0., 21, of '3t1
V•ld.<G Orl"tt, Hunllftlllon Be.ch
Ind C1"'I L .• 20, of 17' CKil Pl1ce.
(Olli Mffe.
5.&llLE·U.BLE, J.,..rv L., 41, o1 7117
~lv..i.. 111...,., Ven Nuv1 -M•rthe w., 4S, of 1114 Vld• PJKe,
Coe.le ~.
CUNNINGH.i.M-SANFORD, lrlen P ,
20, "' Jl6J Te<nPle Hlllt Drive, L ..
9un1 BtKh 1nd St""r• K .• II, of UJO Wnl Ave., Coslt Mesi.
June t
GARNETT-EVANS. W1l1et" l ., ?J, •nd
Ed111 L., 2l, DO!h o1 12'1 Maflov
Drll't, H1111!1Mton llNCll.
NOACK-PALMER, Jort F., ?!, t nd
P1ull H., 17, both of 1021 S191"rlm
"ve .• St1n1on.
k OVELY..Y.cDONNELL, Wllllttri I.,,
J7, of 121t W. BlltlcMI Bhod., N111o-
_, INOI -IC.llllftft A., 24,
of 110 S. Sulllv1n, S.nl• Ane.
5E!BERT4..AUER. Jot!n C , 20, of
111111 Pert; SI. t ncl P•mll• J., 17.
d 1221 Paril SI., both of Hunllntlon
·~· McKEE·TR ... VIS, Wilt!•m A .• 16, ol
1111 Montovl1 Ave. 1...0 1t1•m• L ..
''· of '21 Governor, bo!ll ol Co•ll .....
VALOIVIA·WELLS, 5">11!11n M., JI,
• Mid H111I E •. Sl, botll ot JlJl Co•~
Lene, Cost1 Mes~.
llURLESON·BURLESDN, M1• W , Jl,
11111 Vlt11lnl1 R., Jl. bolll ol no
s.11tllm1r. (Of.It Mell. f\IDll.COM·MDORE, J Olln F.. 11, ol
161'1 Gt~ SI .• na lttlherlnr A., 11,
of 15112 No"ln9111m Dr!w , Dcl!ll 01
Hun!lntl"" Betel\. w ... SHINGTON·ICRAFT, Jalln c., :io, ol
] .. 81 ... hort Or!v., Nl!-1 lletc~
1r.d k1rtn L .. 1'0, ol \Ill C1mber1 L-. S6n!t An1. l(UND .... L ... NGLEY, Kenneth II., :11,
of lll:IO Lel<lore, Glendor• ano s ....
•I n M .. :11, of 2'\62 Vlt C11i!orn!1,
C11•l1!reno lie.ell. J ON ES·FRIEOMAN, Rober! J ., 10, o!
lD'I P1ll1.0t Ave., Sen Clemente
tnd ktltlf"ln l ., 11, of 13112 Billi
Fin Drive, D•MI PQ•n•.
WILLIAMS.SCHWALM, flon1 lcl l ., JO,
of 414 C1ny..,, Acres. Ltount 11"11•<11
•nd EIGite C .. 11. of IHI\ C11\dy
Line. o.roen Gtove. llRICklCL·DUNANN. Jl mff A., 11. of
11n1 'Ntlnul tncl P1mel1 M , :n.
YOU KNOW
YOUR CHILD
WILL LEARN
TO SWIM AT
BLUE BUOY
Afl4 So WIU Yo111
IA11akl111, lalboa hland,
Sa11to A11a, Twth1
546-1800
He Wanted
A Clieetah,
Gets Hippo
SEATI'LE (AP) -Why
would a man want to own a
hippiopoLamus?
"Oh, I don't know. It's bet·
ter than owning a cheetah ,"
said A1lan E. Smith. Seatllc
realtor who has bought a 2,000
pound hippo for his Plain,
Wash., ranch.
When Smith went to an
animal dealer here to buy a
cheetah, the dealer offered
him an elephant. They settled
on a hippopotamus.
Her name is Gertrude. She's
a Denver native, whose older
sister resides at Seatlle's
Woodland Park Zoo.
"Amating at it may seem,
Gertude has a personality
that's out ol this world ," said
Smith. "She expresses af.
feclion by opening her mouth
and Jetting you rub the inside
or it."·
Gertru de has joined a grow·
Ing menagerie on the Smith
ranch which also harbors
llamas and Scotlish longhorn
cattle. Smith also is thinking
or buying some kangaroos.
"I jusl like animals," he
said. The ranch produces only
alfalfa and tin1othy hay com·
mercially . The animals are for
Smith"s pleasure.
''1-lippos arc very
economical for their bulk ," he
says. "More economi ca l than
an elephant." She sto\vs away
half a bale of hay each da y
plus vegetable trimmings
from Leavenworth, Wash.,
market.
When she arrived at the ran-
ch last month, Gertrude lived
in the basement of the barn,
sleeping in an insulated stall.
Ranch manager Bert Stegenan
dug a six-foot-deep pit near
the barn and filled it with
water , and Gertrude spends
most of her time there these
warmer days •.
This winter, Smith plan! to
convert half the barn base·
ment for her.
"I'm planning on gelting a
couple of kangaroos to keep
Gertrude comany during the
winter," said Smith.
••she gets very lonely.''
. .
Wife's· Plea Leads to Viet Transfer.
GRAND RAPIDS, M I c h •
(AP) Mrs. Curt!J R.
Skillman, 21, was a war widow
once, and because she doesn't
want to be one for the second
time ber husband has been
transferred out of Vietnam.
After her first hus~nd,
David Demorest, was killed in
action ln Vietnam in 1967,
Mrs. Skillman enlisted In the
Women's Army Corps and
served 10 montha.
Later, however, SkllJman Skillman was transferred
was tranaferred to Vietnam, last week from Vietnam: to
rot Korea for the remal.nlng 11 and fl.In. Skillman w e to monlhl of his tour or duty.
Ford : -:::::c:=:=:=:=:=::::::;;:;
"l'm expecting a baby in,.
f;trs. Skillman told her atory
to Rep, Gerald R. Ford, (R·
Mich.), and he apparently got
tbe Anny to act.
She got married a second
time . Her new hu,llbalkt 'was
stationed in Gennany at the
time.
June and want the 1 baby to
have a father , • • Going
through one death was enough.
l just couldn't go through it
again."
HAPPY ,:,:
H1~• 1 h 1 pp y w••k•nil.J
St•rt It by reedh19 th1 WE:EICol
ENDE!t 111 th• DAILY PILOT,I
'"
mi:!r.:JE!.ICI E!.1C1 r:>S PSE!.ICIE!.IC!er.:I E!.1C1 [:!lCJ E!.1C1 E!.1C1 [:!.ICJ E!.IClt:!IDI E!.1C1 E!.1C1 r:!ICl efc:il . . I
o .iP.~~ FINAL DA YS!l
llat=Ji:J l;!JCI l!:!J'ClEJE]EJElEJElt:ICJEJEli:rcn=rclE1EIEJElt:!JCle:rcJEJElEJElr:!J'Clr:!J'CJE!l1
·_ Think Slim for Summer 1
In jtnl o few 1hort week1 you, too, can 101e 15-20-25 pound1 and be
proud of the way you lqok. ladies, you'lt be wearing the new
figure -reYeDling fo l1 foshion1 with pride and confidence. And, Men,
the new ta ilor-shoped 1ui11 will look great on you -once you've
1ediscoyered your waist, Overweight Is not only damaging
to your heDlth, but actually odds years lo your appearance, Look
younger and trimmer plu1 gain new pep and vitality the eo~y, pro~n
HeDllh Spos way. Don't put it off-take it offl Act now, for
1peciol lo w reduced rotes during Holiday Notional fitness Month.
INCOMPARABLE
I, FACILITIES
1 • Hea led Roman
Swimming Pool
• Ultra Modern
Conditionil'lg Facllities
• Finnhh Rock Sauna
Room'
• Roman Steam Rooms
• Electronic Mas1age
• Florida Sun Tin Rooms
• Whirlpool Baths
• Conditioning F1cllitie1
• Swiss F1cial Machines
j FRff! FRff!
I ~:~i;;i;~!~:~~;; :;:·'
Swfmn1slics to music • No
time limit on your visits
•No 1ppoinlmtnh ntctssary
• Sep1r1!t faci lities for men
• Separtle facilities for
women •Free gue5t
privileges • Un limited hours
-unlimited days. fret! Fr11J
..
., -. SEPAllA11, FACILITIES
FOR ME · .. & WOMEN
Free Tours & Demonstrations· .
AV1i11bla Daily al All l0<ltions .
JUNI IS
IATIOIW
fl1lllSS
MOllTllAS
DECIAllD
IT Tiii
' j
J
11
' I
The two of us to serve you better
•
~.
For your personal convenience Newport Balboa Savings has two locations
to serve you. Visit either office for:
THE SAME BIG 5.13% YIELD -Iha highest in the nation-on all ac-
counts when current annual dividend rate of 5% is compounded daily
end maintained for one year. Funds earn nigtit and day, from day·in to
day--out. Funds received on or before the tenth of any month earn
from the first when held to quarter's end.
THE SAME BIG 5.38% YIELD on 3 year BONUS ·CERTIFICATES
(In mulliples ol $1,000) by adding the .25% BONUS DIVIDEND lor
each of the three years to the daily compcunded annual earnings.
THE SAME SAFETY AND SECURITY, Your funds are Insured up
to $15,000. We maintain high reserves; our lending policies are
conservative.
TH~ SAME SERVICES: Savings and Investment Accounts, KEOGH
plan, Monthly Security Accounts, Escrows, Safe Deposit, Money
Orders. Reversionary Trusts.
THE SAME SMILES. The kintl ol warm, l riendly, elficienl service, aided by
modern facilities and equipment-our personal concern is never computerized
SO BRING MONEY.
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ••
Main Office : 3386 Vl• Lido. Newport Beach, Callfornla 92663, Phone: (714) 6l3~130 .
Cororia dtl Mar Office: Flnanclal Plaza. 550 Newpart Ct1nter Drive 92e26, Phone: (71 4} 644·1461
P. A Palmer, Chairman of Iha Board Agnes Blomqulat, President
"
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Fountain. Valley Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stoeks
·'
VOL 62, NO. 150, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1969 · TEN CENTS •
P etitione1's
•
lJrge An11e x
Of St1n set
Larwin Plea Fails
One hundred and sixty Sunset Beach
residents r..1onday petitioned Huntington
lJeach City Clerk Paul Jones ror an-
nexation of their tiny community.
Mrs. Virginia r..t. Strain, secretary of
the Sunset Beach Community Council,
turned over the signatures, . cpmaxing
months or intensive \vork by ~several
c.\tizens who have been anxious to have
the area annexed .
Accordin gto J\1rs. Strain, the Sunset
Beach residents would be provided with
better police and fire protection if the
area were to become part of Huntington
Beach. She said annexation "'ould
represent "the last part in a jig-s~w
Puzzle" Y.'hich would complete the city
map.
She indicated the primary reason for
seeking annexation lies in municipal
benefits the area \vould gain.
Paramount is the fa ct that the city has
shown ravorable reaction to property·
owners' demands to turn a disputed mile·
. Jong strip into a public parking area, she
said,
The narrow strip of land, whh::h runs
between North Pacific and :.iouth Pacific
Avenues, is currently own~ by the
Southern Pacific 1iailroad Company and
has been earmarked for construction of a
&eries or apartment duplexes.
Construction of apartments has already
begun over the loud complaints of many
residents who ha ve asked the county to
purchase the land for beach parking.
To date, the county has shown an in--
terest in developing the strip into a park-
1ng lot, especially since virtually no
spaces are currently available to
beachgoers. The county, however, is
without the necessary funds thus far.
The Huntington Beach City Council
Monday appioved a resolution backing
t~e idea oi the county acquiring the strip
for a parking lot and agreeing generally
that if the county buya the land and the
city annexes the area , the county could
retain control of the parking lol.5.
County supervisors consider buying the
land at their Wednesday meeting.
Next step in the annexation procedure
\Viii be a public hearing at 8 p.m. July 28
in the Huntington Reach City Council
Chambers.
By that time Sunset Beach residents
opposing the annexation must have more
than 50 percent of the properly owners
behind them to kill the process.
If the property owners do not defeat
the proposa l, a general election vi'ill be
called sometime in September to
determine if the majority of the residents
would prefer to be a part of Huntington
Beach.
According to City Clerk Jones. the an·
nexation could be completed by the first
\\'eek of November, if everything goes ac-
cording to schedule.
Funeral Rites
Co11ducted for
Dr. R. M. Polentz
Dr. Richard Miles Polentz, a resident
of' Huntin gton Harbour for the past five
years. died Saturday at Veteran's
Hos pital in Long Beach.
Funeral services were held today at
Waverly Chapel, Fairhaven 1t1emorial
Park, Santa Ana.
Or. Polentz, wh..'l died after a brief ii·
lness, was a dentist for 14 years with of-
fices in Anaheim.
He was graduated from the University
of California Dental School in San Fran-
cis-:o, and served in World War It.
Survivors incl~e his wife, Barbara :·
three sons, Joruilhan, Christopher and
Douglas. all of the home, 16931 Bolero
Lane, lluntlngton Jiarbour: and his
molhcr. Ethel Polcntz of Danville, Calif.
Jn addition, he leaves four brothers,
Perry of Saratoga. Lloyd of Paset1,
Wash.. \Vilford and Raymond of
Fullerton : and a sister, Eliuibeth Cross
of Danville.
Memorial contributions may be made
to Children's Hospital of Orange County.
Arrangements are uilder direction of
Wlnbigle r Family l\.lortuary. Intennent
"'ill be at Fairhaven 1t1emorlal Park.
LUCKY REA DERS
SEE SHOW FREE
Everyone loves to set a good flrc"·ork.s
f!how on lhe f'ourth of July, but not
everyone gea to see one for free.
Some DAILY PILOT readers are going
to luck out this week and gt:t free passes
to lhe July 4th show at Anaheim St.Jdium.
Tht:re is no obligation on your part.
The lucky rtaders will find their names
scattered throughout the cla.sslOed sec·
tion this week .
Better hnve a look rlghl now.
Court Won't Change Tract Decision
SUNSET BEACH ANNEX PETITIONS ARRIVE AT CITY HALL
City Cle rk Jones Accepts Papers From Mrs. Strain
Red Guns Open Up
Convoy ReachesBenHet
But Relief T eniporary
SAIGON (UP I) -U.S. military
spokesmen reported to d a y a convoy of
2,000 reinforcements with tons of am-
munition had battled through encircllng
Communist forces to try to lift the siege
of Ben Het where the Green Beret and
South Vietnamese defenders fought off
four ground assaults and killed 153 at-
tackers.
But any relief to Ben llet. a U.S.
Special Forces camp in the central
highlands, was only temporary. North
Vietnamese gunners in the surrounding
hilli )Ill ~ <111!1\, M~!Y,, 1fhh 19'l
rounds of~ mortar..~-Uio.
heaviest of the 48-day siege.
Communist gunfire south of Ben Hel
shot down a U.S. Air Force C130 Hercules
transport, killing the six men aboard , and
then shot down an Army UHl rescue
helicopter at the scene, wounding three
men aboard .
The U.S. Command also reported two
other aircraft lost in the st.epped up
fighting.
While Viet Cong units carried out a new
terrorisl campaign in the Mekong Delta
far to the south or Saigon, military
spokesmen reported a new 4,000-man
Ameri::an offensive in the Khe Sanh area
-Operation Utah Flat, "'hich began
June 12 and has killed 161 Communists at
a loss of 28 Americans killed and 80
\vounded.
U.S. ~1arines involved in the operation
one mile south of Khe Sanh added to lhe
toll early today by setting up an ambush
trap outside their base perimeters.
A spokesman said a platoon of Marlnt:s
opened. fir~ on Communi!ls lhey aaw
~ ioum. lba_bue. alerting lheir
colleagues inside. The l~athemecks then
retreated back ins1de th e perimeter to
add their firepower to the battle. The
Communists killed three Americans and
wounded 13 but lost 4t dead in the attack
which failed to breach t,Je defenses.
Jn the latest round of fighting t h e
Communists shelled lS allied bases and
Vietnamese towns during the night.
Casualties were reported negligible, but
the new terrorism in the Mekong Delta
took a heavier toll.
City Studies Ways to Pay
For Cente1· Con st1·uctio11
City Councilmen 1t1onday night ex-
plored with two firnui the means to finan·
ce constru ction of a $6 million civic
center and after more than three hours
of discussion asked the city adminis1rator
for a written rccommendalion on how the
new center should be financed:
The council heard the city's newly ap-
pointed architect. Kurt Meyer, discuss
his scope of services as the dcsignpr ror
the new administration and police
facilities to be built at fi.1ain Street and
Mansion Avenue on a 12-acre site.
Although he is nnt yet under contract to
the city, Meyer said he will propose a fee
which will be a percentage of the amount
budgeted for the center and later a flat
fee based on the construction cost
estimates.
Councilmen also heard from George
Dickerson of the \\'illiam J. fl.1oran Co .•
general contractors, and -from Leon
Valley Driver
F aces Gun Char ge
•
Norman , representing finance firms.
Dickerson said his company would
oversee preparation for bidding and take
the bids from subcontractors and then
O\'crsee the actual building much os a
general contractor would do.
lie said that at present he cou ld not tell
th1: council how much the services of his
co1npany would cost, only that "it will be
a fair fee_"
Norman said his company would
charge the city no fee, making its profit
from resale of bonds. He suggested a
non·profit corporation to issue the bonds
which would be repaid from the city's
general fund or from a special levy to
repay the bonds. ·
His company would purchase the bonds
from the city, "thus guaranteeing a
buyer, !"Omething not possible tod2y when
placing bonds on the open market."
The two com panies teamed to finance
and build the Costa Mesa civic center and
;ire. involved now with the La Habra
center.
Councilmen asked City Ad1ninistrator
Doyle Miller to make a recommendation
on financing the center. Presumably the
council will order financing steps upon
presentation of Miller's report.
The Larwin Co. failed 1t1onday in Us se-
cond attempt lo have the Fourth District
Court or Appeals in San Bernardino
overturn an Orange County Superior
Coort decision halting its propOsed ~
home tract in Fountain Valley.
Appellate Judge Hilton H. McCabe
denied the firm 's petition for a writ or
prohibition and mandate filed June 16
against the lower court, recall leader
Eugene Van Dask and the City of Foun-
tain Valley.
Larwin Co. attorneys were trying, with
!heir second appeal, to have the higher
court changt: an April 30 Superior Court
ruling which said zone change'> made by
the city on the Larwin property \vere im·
proper and the tract could not be built.
C011troversy over the proposed small-
Jot development touched off the city's
current recall campaign led by Van Oask
and directed against Mayor Robert
Schwerdtfeger, Vice f\1ayor Donald
Fregeau and Councilman Joseph Cour-
rcges.
A similar appeal submitted to the Ap-
pellate Court in May was also denied on
June 3 .
The Superior Court decision contested
by Larwin attorneys and the majority
faction (those named in the recall action)
of the city council, said basically that the
city's zoning procedures were incorrect,
Arab Commandos
Blo'v Pipelines
In Da1·ing Raid
By United Press lnttrnatlon.al
Arab commandos In their most daring
raid since end of the June 1967 war blew
up four 12-inch oil pipelines in the lsrpll
port of Haifa today, setting fires Urat
blazed for hours. The tempo of fighUng
along the Suez Canal Increased and !here
were air: artillery and land battles. ·
An Israeli spokesman in Tel Aviv said
Israeli jets shot down an Egyptian MIG in
a dogfight over the Gulf or Suez. An
Egyptian spokesman reported an Israeli
plane shot down in the fight and said
Egyptian commandos wiped out an
Israeli anny base across the canal, kill-
ing 22 men.
Haifa Is one of Israel's major cities on
the Medi terranean 52 miles north of Tel
Aviv and the country's main port. Israeli
police said the commandos struck around
8 a.m., blowlng up the four pipelines and
spilling l,SOO tons of blazing fuel.
Firemen fought the blaze with foam for
four hours before they brought it under
control, but minor fires blazed for hours
afterwards, \Vitnesses reported. Police
and troops cordoned off the area and
began a search for a group of men setn
near the pipeline before the blast.
Pc>!ice sources said they found one
unexploded charge of explosives near the
site of lhe blast and rounded up severtil
dozen Arabs Jn their dragnet. The site of
the explosion is about 13 miles below the
heavily guarded Lebanon border and 33
miles west of the Jordanian and Syrian
borders. .
Arab guerrillas blew up a section of the
American-owned Trans-Arabian Pipeline
(TAPLlNE) May 31 at a spot where it
crosses Israeli-occupied Syrian territory
on the way from Saudi · Arabia to oil
tem.lnals In Lebanon. About 8,000 tons
spllled Into the Sea of Galilee, Israel's
malp water supply, and ·the Israeli
government closed the pipeline.
ln C.!liro, western diplomats said that
what at first appeared to he routine Suez
Canal Incidents seemed to be snov.•balling
out of control.
Al~ In Cairo, the Palestine Armed
Struggle Command said guerrillas from
Al Assifa, the miltiary arm of Al Falah,
were responsible for the raid on th !.!
Israeli oil refinery pipelin~. A Fountain Valley car salesman was
jailed early today after two policemen
allegedly chaSed the suspect down and
found him armed, af.1.er he allegedly
drove by a doughnut shop v.·here they
were stopped.
Gary R. Jewett, 25, of 16676 fl.1arkham
St., was booked into Costa Mesa City Jail
on suspidon of drunken rtrlving and car·
rytng a coocealed weapon .
Sti~ki11g Ne~k Out
Newport Beach Police Sgt. Don
Burdsall 11nd Reserve Officer Roberl
Duncan said they rlnally stopped Jewett
in the 1500 block of Newport Boulev;.rd
about 3 a.m. and called Costa P.1esa
polJce ror aid.
They said the suspeCt was drivlni south
in northbound line! of the divldtd
boulevard. but they headed him off by us-
ing the old Newport Bouleva rd fr""'ge
rood.
Patrolman Duncan told Costa t.tesa
police he found a loaded .22 caliber
aut.omallc on t b e seat of Jewell's
car while the motorist Y'as belns; ques-
tioned.
Will Glue Hold GuiUoti1ie?
LONDON (UPT) -~1ichael Booty stak·
ed his life todtiy on his company's new
glue.
Booty, %7, will place Ws head In a
gi.:llloti~ in the chamber, or horrors at
Madame Tussaud's waxworks t'ohight.
The guillotine has. been altered 1'° lhst'
Ill razor-sharp blade is suspend1-st b'y a
rope which has been cut and rejotndd by
the new glue.
If lhe glue holds lhe bl•dc sh..llcLlnd
Us 'deadly plunge Just above BololJ's
neck. _, 1 ,
1f It does not hold, a spoke~ 1or; ~ladame 1""s11ud's said lbe blade ttllf,O
through Booty's . neck "like a butcher's
knlf~ going lhroogh a piece of stoak."
The household glue Is called. "Power
Pack" and lta ~anu!acturen;, Borden
CherTiica1$ Ltd., claim It ls the "strongest
glue in the world." ·
"Our engineers say It hs 99.9 percent.
certain lilt glue will hold," Booty said
bravely. "Believe me , if I wasn 't con·
flde:ot, 1 wouldn't be doing It." •
Booty's w.I re $usanoe, 26, said s: h e
pre!en not lo wllch and wlll ~•ln
hOftle with the.Ir ?·month-old daughter.
' H1s Drm·sald theY ~ave imured hil lUe
lot 100~ poundJ t!llO;Giloy,· . ' '
the tentative tract map filed by the
IAirwin Company was not legal and lhat
property (Southern California Edison
Company easement) not owned by the
builders could not· be used to their credit
to offset reduced lot sizes.
Van Dask originally filed the suit in
Death Suspect
Confound s Law,
Turns Self In
"Candlelight killer'' Robert Willard
Liberty ls back in custody today, three
weeks after he walked to freedom from
an open ward at Metropolitan State
Hospital in Norwalk. ·
But the fonner mental patient almost
had to persuade Orange County sheriff's
officers to take him back, despite reports
this past week that. the hunt for the 21-
year-old Westminster man was ~ing
"intensified."
Libert y checked in Monday at the or-
fice or his attorney, Julius Austero of
Garden Grove, and asked Austero if it
was true that he was the subject of a
search. He told his lawyer that he had
been visiting friends in Oregon and had
only learned on his return that he was on
the wanted list.
Liberty had to wait for some hours in
Austero's offlce while sheriff's in·
vestlgators and district attorney's of·
ricers got their signals uncrossed. He wa.,
then rushed to Orange County Medical
Center where he will be held pending the
iietting of a court hea ring.
It was at a court hep.rlna three weeks
ago lh•t the night of Liberty h'om the
Norwalk faeillty was flnt m':rde public.
Deputy District Attorney Al Wetls con--
demned U1e carelessness of Norw.alk
authorlties for allowing "a dangerous
man like Liberty to walk away from his
ward in such a ridlculously easy man-
ner."
Wells later dismissed 'hospital protests
that Liberty's release was occasioned by
a "clerical error." The angry prosecutor
accused the hqspltal of l!I t a m p I' n g
"discharged" on the records of patients
\vho bad actually escaped from the facili·
ty.
.Liberty g9t the label "candlelight
killer" Crom officers who investigated the
bizarre slaying of Mrs. Marcella Landis,
the attractive brunette who shared his
apartment at 8382 Westminster Ave.,
Westminster.
Officers said they found Liberty on
June 4, 1966, struminlng his guitar and
softly singing while the body of his
paramour lay draped across a living
room sofa. Astonished officers noted that
Liberty had set burning candles all
around the body of his alleged victim.
Both Liberty and the strangled victim
had long records of mental illness and
both had been diagnosed and treated ·in
the mental ward of Orange County
~1edical Center. Both, it was later
discovered. had made several unsuc-
cessful suicide attempts: ,
Liberty was sent to Atascadero after a
Supe.rior Court judge ruled that th e
\Vestminster man was insane and unable
to assist in his own defense.
He is today regarded a$ .sane by
Atascadero and Metropolitan St ate
Hospital officials.
Tot Saves Family
From Home Fire
The sleepwalking tendencies of a 2-year-
old Cypre&s boy probably saved the lives
of his parents and four other children
early Monday m·orning, County Fire
Department officials said loday.
Thon)as Richard s wandered ~from his
bedroom early In the morning and his
brother Anthony Jr .. 3, searched for him.
He found the house fllled with smoke and
awakened his parents.
llis father, AnthOny Richards, s a Id
young Thomas was found In the living
room, still asleep, ·alter three other
children had been taken from the bunting
home.
.. The fire departmtnt w•s 'c11lled but the
flames were subdueo be.fort they anived.
firemen found the home nlled w Ith
smoke !rom Uie blaze which they think
starte<I from defeJ:tl~e wlrin~ · In a
refrtger..a(or. ,
Damage wss esUmated af fl,300 to the
home at 5325 Vista Real. ~
Stock ltl •rlce ts
NEW YORK (AP) -Tht Block market
turned In a wlnnlng perfonnance today -
rarity dUrtng-rectnt weeks of sharp
decline -wilh brokers crtditing a
technical nlly for lhe advance. (sff
quotaUons1 P~es 10.lJ).·
Superior Court which brought the Larwln
deve lopment grinding lo a halt.
lie was joined in his court battle by
Councilman John Harper and Edward
Just, who also opposed the small lots.
some of which were to be only 5,000.
square feet.
KILLED IN VIETNAM
Pfc Paul R. RaJI
Funeral Slated
For Beach GI
Killed in War
Funeral services for Anny Pfc Paul
R. Ross, 20, of 16762 Irby Lane1 Hufttlng·
ton Beach, who died last week in Viet-
nam action. will be conducted at I p.m.,
TIJursday, in the Peek Family Chapel,
\Vestminster. Burial will follow in the
Good Shepherd Cemetery.
Pfc Ross graduated r r om Fountain
v~ney High School in 1967, where he had
played varsity .baseball. He enlisted in
the Army Nov. 28, 1968, and had be:en
in · Vietnam one month when he died .
Survivors inch.Ide his parents, Mr. and
~frs. James R. Ross of the Irby Lane
address; a sister, Pamela, of the home,
and his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Adams of Wyoming.
Beach Council
To Interview
Landscapers
Landscape architects to design the $6
million in park projects in Huntington
Beac h wiU be interviewed by' the City
Council tonight beginning at ?':30 o'clock
in council chambers. ·
The city recently wa s authorized by
the voters to sell $6 million in general
obligation bonds to finance an extensive
park program including a large central
city park ,
Several finns have been interviewed
by the Recreatlon Department screen-
ing committee.
Five firm s had been in the running.
but one. LinCsch and Reynolds of Long
Beach, withdrew when the' city an-
nounced the hiring of Tom Severns tq
oversee park development. Severns has
been connected with the flnn ln the past.
Orange .A Coas t
&ez
\fe ather
The sun may poke his sleepy
head ·through the clouds for a btt
longer on Wednesday as the Or-
ange Coast enpoys temperatures
in the lower 70 's.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Se1L. John Schmitz' all: clas1
control ltgiilation, whtcli fiG
parents decide if llttir young·
sters wUl 14:2ke !lie course, has
poued cruicial f&urdlt . Stt Story
Poge 3.
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2 OAU.V PILOT H
South . Viets
Chide Cong
On Pullout
PARIS (UPI) -A South Vietnamese
atttclal said today the Viet Cong are
"putting the cart before the horse" in
their reported agreement to withdraw
troops from Cambodia once the fighting
atopa in Vietnam.
The C.mbodian chief or state, Princt
Norodom Sihanouk, announced Saturday
the \'iet Cong had promised him In writ·
in,g to withdraw all their troops from
Cambodia once the war was over.
The pledge would be the first time the
Viet Cong formally had admitted the
presence of Communist forces in cam.
bodia.
But a responsible South Vietnamese of·
ficial said today : ''If the Communist
troops are still in Cambodia, peace will
never ntum. 'The presence of Communist
troops in Cambodia arv:l. South Vietnam
as well u Laos i.s the cause of the war."
On the reporls of the pledge made to
Sihanouk, be said : "This Is putting the
cart before the horse."
The allied position taken at the Viet.
nam peace talks, now in their 23rd week,
has been that the wilhdrawal of Viet
muat be part or an eventual peace deal.
The Communists have n e v e r
acknowleda:ed allied claims that Viet
Cong force.s from Cambodia and Laos
border aectiona of Cambodia and Laos as
i;:taging areu.
Rites Conducted
For OV Teacher
Mrs. Sherwin
Funeral services fDr HaW Elizabeth
Sherwin, '6, an Ocean View School
District teacher who died June 19 after a
Las Vegas auto accident, were held at 1
p.m. today at Dilday Brothen Chapel in
Huntington Beach.
Mrs. Sherwin and her husband, Jack,
v.•ere returning from a Las Vegas trip,
when they were struck broadside on U.S.
91 south, on J une 14 by another car which
ran a red light at Troplcana Avenue on
the Strtp, according to the Nevada
Highway Patrol.
After four days In West Memorial
Hospital, Las Vegas, Mrs. Sherwin died
from injuries received when she wu
ejected from the car by the impac
ejected from the car by the impact.
She bad betn a teacher of third grade
classes at Star View School slnct 1964
and was scheduled to teach there again
next year.
Survivors include her husband, of 20381
Seven Seas Lane, Huntington Beach; two
sons, David and John of the home, and a
daughter Mrs. Carolyn Morton: her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chrstian Hansler
of Anaheim, and one grandchild.
Burial was at Forest. Lawn Cemetery
in Cypress.
Woman in, Trunk
During Car Crash
WAPPINGERS FALLS, N.Y. (UPI) -
It was Lynne Harbison's car, and she was
the only one in it when it hit the parked
car.
But she wasn't exactly driving it. As a
matter of fact, she was in the trunk at
the time.
Mrs. llarbison, 27, a housewife from
tlearby Hopewell Junction, told police she
parked her car in a friend 's driveway and
was removing a playpen from the trunk
when the car began to roll backward.
She jumped into the trunk to avoid
being hit -and the trunk slammed down,
locking her inside.
The car rolled down the driveway,
across the street and slammed into a
parked car. On impact, the trunk lid
opened and Mrs. Harbison emerged unin·
ju red.
DAILY PILOT
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DAILY ,ILOT Ili ff PMi.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S NEIGHBORHOOD YOUTH CORPS
Alex Hl nojo5a, 16 (left), and Alfred .Sanchez, 17
Payoff for Parks
NYC Program Aids Valley , Youtlis
By TERRY COVILLE
Of tlll Dl llT 1'1191 Sl1ll
The best trimmed tree is one that hard·
ly looks trimmed.
That's j~st one of many tips two young
men from Colonia Juarez have learned
while working with the Fountain Valley
Parks Department under the
Neighborhood Youth Corps program.
Alex Hinojosa. 16. and Alfred Thomas
Sanchez, 17, both say the federally-sup-
ported program has provided them with
one of the mosl challenging summers
they've ever had.
Neither youth ls a stranger to work -
Alex has been a gardener's helper and
Alfred sanded boats -but both had
somewhat of a bleak outlook for work op.
portunlties this summer until they ran in-
to an NYC represent.alive at the Colonla
JUIJ'eZ Community Center.
"Now we 're city employes," says
Alex.
They began working last February, &ut
only afternoons while school was in
session. Npw they work fulltime, under
the supervision of llenry Agonia, field
boss of the park crew.
NYC is a federal program to find jobs
and training for youth up to the age of 18.
The government pays 90 percent of the
cost, as long as another agency -in this
case the city of Fountain Valley -
provides the work and supervision.
Jn Fountain Valley Alex and Alfred are
the only t\VO 'A'Orkers, but Agonia has
been so pleased with their efforts he
plans to ask for the addition of three
more youths in the near future.
"I'm pleased with the whole program,''
says Agonia, "maybe these two are ex·
ceptional, but I'd like to try some more.••
Alex works with the tree trimming
crew. "I only pick up the loose brush and
limbs," he says, "but I've learned a lot
about trimming trees."
Alfred sees more of the parks in his
capacity as mower and planter. "I never
did this kind of work before," he ex·
plains. "atld if it weren't for this job I'd
probably just be loafing now."
Their goal is perhaps permanent work
with the city in the parks department,
and Agonia believes they can make the
jump.
"It's been real good training for them,"
he says.
The program is run at little cost to the
city. Supervision is the primary re·
quirement and Henry Agonia puts in a lot
ol time to that end, but h-bas the
~spect of both boys who label him
"tops".
Pay rate is about $1.40 per hour.
Not overwhelming, but a Jot more than a
boy can earn sitting on a street corner. A
maximum of 32 hours work per week is
also placed on all NYC workers.
Girls are eligible too, and the city l.!
thinking about training: a young secretary
or clerk's aide under the program.
Alex swns up the experieace like this,
"It's just the right kind of work for me.
And I get a Jot more out of it than just
hours and money,"
Charge Dropped Against
All-nude Santa Ana Bar
Contempt dlarges against a Santa Ana
bar at 'A'hich all·nude entertainment had
been banned were dismissed ~fonday
v.•hen the district attorney's office refused
to press charges.
Cleared by Superior Court Judge
Claude Owens was the Apartment (no
conneclion with the Apartment A.Co.Go),
a Main Street tavern which faces trial
"'ith four other \\'atering places on
charges of featuring bottomless en-
tertainment.
perfonners will be covered In the low
pelvic area in the time preceding trial.
Lining up with them when the trial date
Is set will be representatives of the
llarbor Inn, La Habra, the Country Girl
No. 2, Anaheim and the Vampire Room,
Santa Ana.
Many of the entertainers who put on
their bottomless shows at the bars have
been heavily fined with the altem11tive of
lengthy prison stays. Among them is
Carol Cybulski. 32, of Laguna Beach, v.·ho
drew a $5,000 fine or 500 days in jail for
her torrid, "Hey Jude'' belly dancing at
the Apartment A.Co-Go.
Columnist Pegler Die ~
•
Vitriolic Writer Cited for Exposing Rackets.. • TUCSON, Ari•. !UPI) -Wettbrook
Pegler, Pulitr.er Prlle winning columnist
known for his scathing verbal assaults on
some of the great figures Jn history, died
today at the a1e of 74.
Death came at 2:30 a.m. PDT, at SL
Mary's Hospital where the craggy-brow·
ed, fierce-eyed writer was admitted about
three weeks ago.
The cause of death was not announctd
but it was known that Pea:ler had suf·
fered from stomach cancer in recent
years.
At one lime Pea:ler's column appeared
in 186 newspapers and he was reported to
have accumulated a million dollars. He
retired to his home here about five yean
ago.
Al the height of his career, Pegler had
a gin for vituperation that inany felt wu
unrivalf4 in modem limes. He feuded
with some of the greats of his day and
minced no words In describiag them.
Presidents were often targets for his
verbal shots. Franklin D. Roosevelt was
"Moosejaw." Harry Truman was a "thin-
lipped hater." Truman countered by call·
ing the columnist a "guttersnipe."
In 1941 Pegler won the Pulitzer Prize
for his expose of labor racketeers and
one of them ruefully commented he'd
been "Pegleri.zed."
His critical faculty was always sharp
and he was alert to expose phoniness in
all walks of life.
Pegler was known as a loner and had
few close friends. He was married early
in his career to Julia Hannan of
~lemphis. Tenn. She died in Rome in
1955. In 1959 he married Fearl W. Doane.
They were divorced in 1961. Later that
same year he married Maud Towart and
she was with him at his death.
James Westbrook Pegler, born on Aug.
Valley School
Leaders Picked
For lnstih1te
Fountain Valley School District educa·
tto nal leader Robert J. Lindstrom has
been .selected to participate in the fourth
annual Institu te for the Developme11t of
Educational Activities program.
He will attend a one-week session for
school administrators at Mills College,
Oakland. The dates will be announced
later this summer.
Tbe major topics of discussion will be
how to deal with the mounting problem!
of ,student activism and curriculum
relevancy.
Lindstrom, who has served as ~principal
of Arevalos School for six years, was
among 400 educators ~t the
United States to be seleCted tor t h e
workshop program.
Boy Kills Older
Brother in Tiff
OAKLAND (UPI) -A IS.year.,,Id bey
killed his 19-year-<>ld brother Monday
night with a shotgun blast, according to
police.
Officers said the slain youth, Robert
Jefferson, and his younger brother,
Reginald, had quarreled most of the day
over an undisclosed subject.
Reginald. police said, picked up his
father's 16 gauge shotgun and said,
··come outside if you're not chicken."
Robert was hit with a blast in the chest
In front of the house. 'Two sisters were in·
side, but the parents were absent.
Reginald was taken to juvenile ball.
Britons Pay Tribute
To Earl Alexander
WINDSOR, England (AP) - A 19-gun
:iialute thundered over the battlements of
\Vindsor Castle today as Britain bade
farewell to one of her greatest soldiers,
Field Marshal Earl Alexander of Tunis.
The body of the 77·year.old World War
Jt commander was carried to the castle
on a gun carriage pulled by seven black
horses. Troops lined the route, and many
of Alexander's war veterans wept in the
somber crowds.
•
Ul"t Te ......
'30' FOR COLUMNIST
W••tbrook Pegler Dita
2. 1894. tollowed in his father·s footsteps.
His father, Arthur James Pegler, was a
newspapennan in Minneapolis and later
in Chicago.
\Vhen he was 16 years old, Pegler took
a job as an office boy in the Chic.ago
bureau of the United Press, later UPI.
During the Republican National Con·
NEW MAN AT THE HELM
Weapons Stetion's J•wttt
vention of 1912, however, he got 11 joW
\Yith the International News Service,
helping its experienced men cover the
event. He returned to the United Pres.s
and worked in Chicago, Des Moines, New·
York and Dallas.
In 1916, the United Press sent hiin t.o
London as a special correspondent, and a
year later he was aceredlled L'i a war
correspondent with the American Ex..
pedilioaary Force in France. Pegler had .
a series of controversies with censora.,
admirals, generals and others during his
London assignment. After the annlstictt.
he returned to the United States and wa &.
sports editor of the morning service of
the United Press from 1919 to 1925.
He recalled once that during his Lot\,.:
don days he talked to the famed cor'~
respondent Floyd Gibbons, who said hC"
had eliminated the middle initial "P.'"
from his byline, because he thought it.
"cluttered it up ." Pegler said Gibbon~
advised him to drop the byline he was
then using of "J. W. Pegler." Gibbori~1
told him that a "Pullman.car" narrM!'
such as ''Westbrook," would be bettd"
remembered. Pegler adopted it. I
Under that byline he became famou~:·
first as a columnist for the New York
World-Telegram, writing ''Fair Enough ,' ..
a column which was syndicated by United
Feature Syndicate to 180 newspapers.
Pegler reached his peak in the early
194-0's. In 1941, he won a Pulitzer Prize
for his campaign against labor union·
racketeers.
He "Peglerized" George Scalise, presl·
dent of the Building Service Employ•
International Union, with the ultimat.e-
result that Scalise was sent to prison fore
IO to 20 years after conviction for forgery'
and embez.z.lement.
'·
• • RETIRING AFTER 30 YEARS -
Weepons Station's Simpson
Capt. Jewett Takes Over
Naval Station Command -
Capt. Eugene H. Simpson will tum over
command of the U.S. Naval Weapons Sla·
lion, Seal Beach, to Capt. Frederick F.
Jewel!, II, during ceremonies at 10:30
a.m., h1onday.
Capt. Simpson ls retiring from the Navy
after 30 years of service. He assumed
command of lhe weapons station on Aug.
26, 1966, following a tour of duty with the
Joint Chiefs of Staff. Washington, D.C.
Capt. Jewett has recently returned
from a 14-monlh tour in Vietnam, where
he was plans officer for the U.S. ~1ilitary
Assistance Command, Saigon .
A veteran of World \\'ar II, retiring
Capt. Simpson has been decorated for
nine Pacific campaigns and has received
the Bronze Star and the Joint Staff Con1·
mendation Medal.
• On retirement he plans to work on tht
staff of Guide Industries in Sun Valley.
Capt. Simpson, with his wife and famil~
will life in Northridge. I
The new commander graduated from
the U.S. Naval Academy in 1947. He is a
Korean War veteran.
Kidney Patie nt
Susa n Keeps Up
Fig ht for Life
"
It has been alleg ed that the Apartment,
like the Apartment A·Go-Go, defied the
court order by again putting on its stage
all.nude performers. But prosecutors ex·
plained that the bottom dropped out ()f
the cue last week when Apar1"!ent A·
Go-G<i manager Harry ~1aselli v.·as
cleared of the Charges.
Press Gets Preview
Susan ~fazze's long right for life went
lnlo its fourth week today as an:i;ious
Orange County Medical Center doctors
and nurses maintain a round the clock
vigil over the 17·year--old kidney
transplant patient.
Today's bulletin listed the condition of
the high school girl as •·critical", the
diagnosis that has been the unfailing
verdict of her surgeons for the past two
weeks. ''General systemic problems and
major complications in the lungs are mt
improving,'' the report adds.
Dismissal carries with it, hov.•ever, the
proviso that the bar must not allow its
female entertainers to "defy the spirit of
the order" by wearing misleading in·
novations in certain areas of the body.
Both bars have guaranteed that th eir
Oriental Sougl1t
In Biu·glary T ry
An Oriental who wasn't' as Inscrutable
as they're cracked up to be is the .subject
of an aUempted burglary report filed
with shi!riffs of ricers by a Laguna Niguel
woman.
The 19-year-<>ld homeowner to 1 d
deputies ahe was taking a ?lap Sunday
afternoon when she heard a noise 111 the
v.·indO'A'. When she drew the shades to In·
vestigate she saw n m3n she described a'.'I
an Oriental about five-foot-six and "·ear·
ing a bandaid on one arm.
He was, she told offirer~. busily en·
gaged. in prying the 'A·lndo"'.
She said that when he ~aw her, he look·
ed surprised, thr.n ga ve a "charming
smile," shrugged his shoulders and ran
to a waiting c11r.
Masters Pageant Unveiled
By RICHA RD P. NA LL
Of IM 0.lty Pll91 Stiff
The v.·ink of fla sh bulbs and the purr or
lin1e exposures Monday night heralded
the 34th coming of Laguna's first lady -
the Pageant of the Masters.
Amis akimbo with photograph I c
paraphernalia, the working press
clustered close to the source of thfrtnigic
in woodsy Irvine Bowl.
Their light meters measured the ln-
:ensity of illusions, art from the ages
recreated in life size.
For the public, the six weeks of j•t1ving
pictures" be1in July II and end Aug. 24.
Preview night is July 10 y,·hen the fully·
programmtd first performance raises ltl
cunains on 26 subjects.
Pageant Producer Don \\'illiam5on
~fonday night unveiled six of his illusions
to the eye of the camera. They range not
only through time but this year even take
on space.
A$ Amerlca·s astronauts land on the
moon In July, the Pageant will have its
counterpart, "The Longest Step" painted
by Norman ffockweU .
One-of the astronauts depicted, John
Young, recently made space history in
the close 1unar orbit.
The painting was lechnically difiicult to
trtate because of its tremendOus amount
of det11ll, gauge!, instrumentation, tubes
and wiring. Jt depicts two astronauts
suiting up.
Given body by an orchestra and the
narration of Hap Graham also dr a'A'S
strength from its programming as loca·
tlons are shifted from the main stage to
the 50 (oot upper stage to the woodsy
hillside.
One of the works presented by
William90n was part of a creation show·
Ing both the Pink Period and the Blue
Period in the artistic life of Pablo
Picasso.
"The D\spossHsed"' wlll be shown be-
:-lde Picasso's "~ Tragedy'' from his
blue period.
Another that Is sure to be a crowd
ple:ise.r Is the Pageant creation of "The
Rocket Thrower" a work that stood 45-
fect high at the New York \Vorld 's Fair
ol 196+65.
•
In a difficult pose. Robert ~1ock of
~fanhattan beach is stopped in motion a.s
he bunches his muscles to hurl the
missile skyward.
"Children By The Sea" shows the
warm colors and light of American im·
pressionist Edward Henry Potthast In a
typical AmerlCan beach scene.
Frederic Remington's "The Smoke
Signal"_ is sharp in detail and color con-
trasts, a scene of American Indians.
One of the most vivid contrails un-
veiled by WUUarnson was the old and the
new Olympic Awards. It Is two subjects.
One a modem Gold Medal like the one
won by Lagunan Bill Toomey in the 1968
decalhlon in Mexico City.
The other aw8'rd 15 a decorall\'I! vase of
the type given winners of the original
games held every four years at the plain
of Olympia in Elli, Greere.
The 26 subjects in this ye11or's Pageatll
will be about 80 percent new with thret:
favorites from last year repeated and, of
rourse, the traditional closing repeat,
da Vinci's "Lasi Supper."
' I
Doctors state that the left kidney theY'
grafted into Susan from her mother, Mrs.·
Florence Mazze, 42, is functioning
perfectly. Her crillcal condilion stem!'I
fronl post operative complications th.at
are apparently defying therapy.
Pendleton Brig
Brawl Hurts 26 ,, , ,,
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -One
guard and is prisoners were tre.!lted JOf
injuries afler a brawl Sunday nlghl
between inmates at the Camp Pendleton
~larine Base brig. officials reported r-.1aoo
d8y.
The guard and one prisoner r~quirtd
hospltalliaUon. but name~ of the ~iarlnu
involved y,·ere not released.
The fight was betv.'een white and Negr i>
prlsontrs In a tompound used by 250 lh·
m11tes, officials said. Not all of the In--·
mates took p11rt and there was no •
tempt lo break out, U1ey said. ' ....
................ ;. ....... ~ ................... --.. ··-·-·· .. ~
Laguna Bea eh • Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks
,yo L o2, NO. ·1 so, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1969 TEN CENTS ..
'
Laguna Schools Expected t o Get Blldget Hike
'.>. preliminary budget of $2,726,458 for
Laguna school.!! in the coming fiscal year
is.. up a litlle more ttian $200,000 over the
amount budgeted for the current fiscal < period.
The school board Is expected to adopt
the budget at a special meeting Thursday
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
~
The budget ls subject to change In Its
final form which trustees will adopt in
August. These can include changes in the
predicted ($5 million) assessed valuation
increase when that figure beanpes firm.
It ca n also be changed by a number of
different forms of state monies that
figure In budgeting.
It appears on the strena:t h of the
preliminary budget, at least, that the tax
picture will be about the same as last
year for district property owners.
The 1969-70 preliminary estimate would
require a $l.60 tax rate compared to a
rate of $2.51 this year. However, Edward
Hind. district business manager, thinks
ace e
Dow1a the
Mission
:Salt C1·eek Issue
Studied by Capo
SAN JUAN CAP ISTRANO - A request
by the Capistrano Bay Park and Recrea·
tion District (or support in gaining public
access to the Salt Creek beach will be
studied by the San Juan Capistrano City
Council.
Councilmen Monday referred the plea
to the city attorney for an investigation
into current situation. The park district
asked for a supporl resolution urging the
Orange Counly Board of Supervisors to
seek means to provide public access to
the ocean property.
·• Jaycees Plan 4th
LAKE FOREST -An 0'1d fashioned
Fourth is planned as tne Mission Viejo
Jaycees hold their first annual Com-
munity Day Celebration July 4 at Lake
Forest. Aclion slarts ii.t 8:30 a.m. Friday.
On tap are a bicycle derby, an arts and
crafts display, a Slretl dance, baking and
dancing contests and a carnival midway
as well as the traditional fireworks and
beauty contest.
:e Capo Barbecue OK'd
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Approval
for a barbecue sponsored by the San Juan
Capistrano Fiesta Association in com·
memoration or the California Bicen·
tennial was given ~londay by San Juan
City councilmen.
The activity will be held July 27 from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at a location yet to be
determined, said Al Jiminez, "El
Presidente" of the association.
e A rt 1¥orkr hop Sel
LAGUNA NIGUEL -~tail registration
for a sun1mer Art Awareness Worla!hop
for children from nine to 12 years of age
is still open. The workshop runs from Ju-
ly 8 through Aug. 5 and classes meet
Tuesday at Crown Valley Elementary
School.
\York shop v.·ill be taught by Zondra
Knutsen. Fee is $12.50 per child and in-
cludes cost of art materials. Registration
and checks may be mailed to the Niguel
Art Association. 29501 Vista Plaza,
Laguna Niguel. For further inforn1alion,
call 495-4622 or 495-4262.
.e P e r rar111 el JHeet Set
CAPISTRANO BEACH -Trustees or
the Capistrano Unified School District
will meet in a special sessioo Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. to discuss schools' personnel.
Among ilenis for consideration are the
reassignment of Richard Herr as prin-
cipal or Capistrano school and authoriza.
lion or a refund <:heck for $7,400 to J. D.
Diffenbaugh Co. for construction work,
JH01·e Aid Needed
Relief Reaches
Besieged Camp
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. military
spokesmen reported t o d a y a convoy of
2,000 reinforcements with tons of am-
munition had battled through encircling
Communist forces to try to lift the siege
of Ben Het where the Green Beret and
South Vietnamese defenders fought off
four ground assaultJ and killed 153 at-
tackers.
But any relief to Ben flet, a U.S.
Special Forces camp in the central
highlands, was only temporary. North
Vietnamese gunners i'1 the surrounding
hills bit !be \;llnp Moqday with 1111
rounds of artillery and mortar fire -the
heaviest of the 48-day sJe1e.
Communist gunfire south of Ben Het sldcicilin a U.S. Alt force ·c1:io Hercules
transport, killing the ilx men aboard, and
then shot down an Army UHl rescue
helicopter at the scene, wounding three
men aboa rd.
The U.S. Command also reported two
other aircraft lost in the stepped up
fighting.
While Viet Cong units carried out a new
terrorist campaign in the Mekong Delta
far to the south of Saigon, military
spokesmen reported a new 4,CM»-man
Amerl.::an offensive in the Khe Sanh area
-Operation Utah Flat, which began
June 12 and has killed 161 communists at
a loss of 28 Americans killed and 80
wounded.
U.S. Marines involved in the operation
one mile south of Khe Sanh added to the
toll early today by setting up an ambush
trap outside their base perimeters.
A spokesman said a platoon of ?.1arine.!I
opened fire on Communists they saw
sneaking toward the base, alerting theU:
· colleagues inside. The leathernecks then
retreated back inside the perimeter to
add their firepower to .the battle. The
CommunlatJ ·killed tbl'ee Ameri~ 04 · ·
wounded lJ but' loSt 44 de.ad In the attack
which failed to breach the def~.
1a ~ ... ~st round of fighting th e
CdfiilfUIUIUI shelled 15 allled ba.., iiid
Vietriainese towns during the night.
Casualties were reported negligible, but
the new terrorism in the Mekong Delta
took a heavie r toll.
Jn the Delta town of Cal Tau, 60 miles
southwest of Saigon, a bomb set off in a
market place Monday killed six civilians
and wounded 21. A Communist road mine
near coastal Phan Thiel killed two
civilians and wounded five. Five other
civilians were wounded today when Com-
munists fired hro 840 rocket grenades in-
to a regional forces outpost 22 miles
south of Saigon.
Autonetics Plant to Pose
Water Service Problem
North American's Autonetics plant In
Laguna Niguel, which will employ about
7,200 persons initially, also meanll king·
size demands on water and waste dis·
posal services.
Carl Kymla, manager of the Moulton-
Nigue\ Water District. !laid that for each
emplc.ye about 200 gallons of industrial
waste will ~ created-about 1,440,000
gallons daily.
\Vater demands ror the big plant will
be less amounting to about 25 gallons per
da1. per employe or about 81,000 gallons
dally.
Kymla said the huge requirement.s of
the plant v.·ill not place a strain on the
capacities of his district, that the indus·
Stock Markel•
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
turned in a winning perfonnance: today -
a rarity during recent weeks of sharp
decline -with broker.!! crediting a
technical rally for the advance. (See
quotations, Pages 10-11 ).
trial needs had been foreseen and met.
Industrial waste created at the North
American facility will have to be treated
to standards established by the San Diego
\Vater Quality Control Board.
Generally, these standards requ ire that
the waste be. about the same consistency
as domestic discharge.
Following treatment by North Amer-
ican, the waste will again be treated by
the water district's sewage stations and
will be exhausted into inland sewage
facilities or into the ocean from the Aliso Cr~k ouifall.
The increased amount or matter to be
treated and disposed of will not tax dis-
trict facilities because times or dischar~e
ocaJr at the times when domestic dlS-
charge is least-during working hours.
To provide water to the Autonetics
plant, the water' district will construct a
IO million gallon water reservoir which
will also serve parts of Laguna Niguel.
Stieki11g Neek Ont
Guards to Keep
Eyes Open for
Beauty Entries '
Will Glue Ho'ld Guillotine?
LONOON (UPI) -Michael Booty stak·
ed his life today on his company's new
glue. .
Booty, 27, \viii pla ce his head in a
gt:illotine in the chamber of horrors at
?-.1adame Tussaud's Wa1works tonight.
The guillotine has been altered *> that
Its rawr·sharp blade is suspended by a
rope which has been cut and rejoined by
the new glue.
I( the glue holds thf blade should end
Its deadly plunge just above Booty's
neck.
If it does not hold , a spokesman for
Afadame Tussaud 's said the blade will go
through Booty's neck "like a butcher'&
knife going through a piece of steak."
The household glue ls called "Power
Pack" and its manufacturers, Borden
Chemicals Ltd., claim it Is the "ltrongesl
glue in the work!."
"Our engineers say It Is 99.I percent
certain the glue will hold," Booty said
bravely. "Believe me, if I wasn't ron-
fident. I wouldn't be doing it"
Boo1y·1 wife Susanne. 26, said s h e
prefers not to watch and will remain
home with their 7·monttJ..old daughter.
ltls firm said they havt: Insured hl1 life
for 100,000 pounds (li80,000),
I
La~na Btach llfeauards may develop
a unique annual occupaUonal hazard dur-
ing the next 10 days -prior to the July 4
Lifeguard Beauty Queen Contest.
The malady or fringe benefit Involves
sure neck and eyestrain, s.ince C{)ll-
testants to be judged during the
Independence Day weekend must be
nootinated by the stalwart supervisors of
surf and sand.
Announcement of the winner Will come
at 7 p.m., following ceremonies at thti
Main Beach Lifeguard tower, according
to Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis.
Judges for the annual July 4 event have
not yet been chosen, he explained, but acf.
ded he ltn't worrltd since the field ol
voluntet!rt is always large.
the present bond interest and redemption
rate of 46 cents may drop a few pennie s.
This 'Nill probably amount to a few cents
increase for the district taxpayer.
Hind said the preliminary budget also
will eat into district re.serves about
$25,000.
A big question mark will be salary in·
crcas<?s for ' teachers and classified
personnel. About five or six percent In In-
creases has been calculated but this
rould change pending outcome of negotia-
tions ~ ith lhe school board.
The budget estimate shows $1 ,286,000
expended for classroom I e a c h e r s '
sa laries this year and $1 ,415,732 figured
for next , an Increase o! $129,732.
CdM 'S DEBBIE SHANNON, 15, BECOMES GOLD MEDAL
Dana Point'• Mary Zavala, 2S, Applies Ma ke up
DAILY l'ILOT l'llo .. 1 '' LM l'•Jllf ' . FINI SHED PROD UCT SPOTL IGHTE D ON PAG EANT STAGE
In Living Color, A ki.!pl ica of Olympic Gold
Dealer's Sound ~loved
Theft of a $140 portable television and
about '25 casi1 was discovered thi s morn·
ing at a J,.aguna Beach car dciler's of·
fice.
Police said the hQtglar broke a door
pane to, enler of.fices t t Barwick Datsun,
1)98 S. Coast Highway, wh Eire he pried
open cabinets and took the cash box .
In another burglary. Ptis ~-Kli-kland, -----iro-t Ocean Ave., apartment 3 told police a
SiS power lnwn mo~cr had been solen
rrdm his rooms by a pack-rat thief who
left an crnply beer cnn.
Raft nl I:lalfway 1\'lark . .
~11A~11 (UP I) -Thor Hryerdahl
reach<ld the halhvay matk today in his
Atlantlc crossplg on the pipyrus raft Ra,
a 'point also marking contplftion of one.~
thlrd ol hll l'lJ)l•i• to '11\o Yuc•tan 09a&t
of Me11:ico::. • . t. , ·~ 4 ::._. ' .,. :..
Alex F. llllkcvltch, 155 S. Coest
lllghway, reJ>()rted· the $120 theft or a
surfboard and bicycle from a garage at
918 Gaviota Drive.
Carl A. Tholin, 250 Beverly St., said
twn 'flo\Ver pots with artificial flowers
stolen from 'his yard were worth $50.
••
Principals' salaries would be up about
$10,000 from $128,300 expended to $135,~7
budgeted.
Hind said the budget is based on a $$
million assessed valuation increase
calculation. A check with the county
assessor, he said, Indicated this should
generally be in the ball park but l_t could
be more or less.
Press Gets
Preview of ·
'Living Art'
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of "" n.nr 1'1191 111/f
The wink of nash bulbs and the purr of
time exposures Monday night heralded
the 34th coming of Laguna's first Indy -
the Pageant of the Masters.
Arms akimbo with photograph I c
paraphernalia, the working pre 111 1
clustered close to the source of the magic
in woodsy Jrvine Bowl.
Their light meters measured the In-
tensity of illusions, art from the ages
recreated· in life size.
For the public, the six weeks of "living
pictures" begin July 11 and end Aug. 24.
J>review night is July JO when the fully·
programmed first performance raises Its
curtains on 26 subjects.
Pageant Producer Don Williamson.
Monday night unveiled six of his illusions
to the eye of the camera. They range not
only through time but !his year even take
on space.
As America's astronauts land on the
moon in July, the Pageant will have its
counterpart, "The Longest Step" painted
by Norman Rockwell.
One of the astronauts depicted, John
Young, recently made space history in
the close lunar orbit.
The painting was technically difficult to
create because of its tremendous amount
of detail, gauge.!!, 'instrumentation, tubes
.and wiring. It depicts two astronauts
£uiling up.
Given body by an orchestra and the
narration of Hap Graham also draws
strength from its programming at loca~
tions are shifted from the main stage to
the SO foot upper stage to the wood!Y.
hillside.
One of the work.!1 presented by
Williamson was part of a cl'eation show·
Ing both the Pink Period and the Blue
Period in the artistic life of Pablo
Picasso.
"The Dispossessed" will be shown be·
(Set PAGEANT, Page Z)
L UCKY READERS
SEE SHOW FREE
Everyone loves to see a good fireworks
show on the Fourth of July, but not
everyone gets to see one tor free.
Some DAILY PILOT readers are going
to luck· out thi.s week and get free passes
to the July 4th show at Anaheim Stadium.
There is no obligation on your part.
The lucky readen will find their names
scattered throughout the classified sec-
tion this week.
Better have a look right now.
01'ange
Weathel'
The sun may poke hls sleepy
head through the clouds for a bit
longer on Wednesday as the Or·
ange Coast enpoys ten1perature11
in the lower 70's.
INSWE TODJ\ Y
Sen. John Schmitz~ se:r cla.ss
Co1itrol /egl&lati011, wlilc:h let.I
parents decide if their ¥tOUng-
sters wilt take the course, ho1
passed cntlcitK hurdle. See Storu
Page 3.
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•
IN LINE FOR PROMOTION -Junior Guard in-
structor Dale Ghere (right) puts representatives of
Laguna Beach Lifeguard Department's three-phase
farm system for future lifeguards through their
DAILY PILOT '"" ,.._,.
paces. Boys (from left) are ~ea Cub Victor Frisbi~,
9; Junior Guard Jerry Chilvers, 13, and Rookie
Guard Digger Ware, 16.
Sea Cub Best Lifeguard
Senior Guard Picks Program Grad Over AU-American
By T01'i1 GORA1AN
Of h 0.11~ l'llet Sl•lf
"l feel that a boy who has progressed
through the lifeguard program starting
with Sea Cubs makes a better lifeguard
than an All-American swinuner from
UCLA who comes out on the beach for
the first time." •
Thus spoke Denys O. "Jake" Jacobsen,
~enior supervisor for the Laguna Beach
Lifeguard Department...He's seen a lot of
lifeguards -and rescues -over the
years at the A1ain Beach lifeguard head·
quarters.
tt was estimated rrom that tower that
there have been ovrr 100 rescues in the
past 10 years in which the department's
Sea Cobs or Junior Guards assisted. In
some instances, a Sea Cub or Junior
Guard made rrscues single-handed.
One case that stands out most in the
nine-year history of the Sea CUb pro-
gram, involving boys eight through 12,
was when a youngster saw JI man in trou·
ble In rough surf of( JI South Laguna
beach. The boy grabbed bis air mat and t
saved the man while a crowd of
beachgoers watched from land.
A present participant in the lifeguard
program, high school senior Earl
\Vellsfry. has made three unassisted
rescues during his association with the
force up to this year.
The lifeguard program is advantageous
to both the young beachgoers and the
department. When a youngster enters the
Sea Cubs at age 8, he will be instructed
on land and in water on water safety and
hazards.
By the time he is graduted from the
program. at age 12. he will be a
reasonably good swimmer, and will have
had experience ln first aid. In the junior
guard programs, ages 13 through 16, the
boy will have increased training in en·
durance swimming.
At this stage in the game. the boys
become active in high school in·
lerscbola.stic water polo and swimming.
A great many of the school's swimming
records are held by past and present
Junior Guards.
Just last year, the city allowed the
lireguard department to hire boys under
18 years of age to be "rookie guards.''
"\I/here else can a person get a job at $2
an hour, 20 hours a week, sitting on the
beach?" asked Junior Guard instructor
Dale Ghere.
The rookie guards are stationed at the
three stands along ~lain Beach. Thi a
year, ther e are eight boys in this stage.
DAllY ruor
By the time a boy graduates into the
regular program, at 18 years ol age, he
has had 10 years experience with
Laguna's beaches.
"We feel they are superior by that
poiat,'' Ghere said. "They're better
guard.1 than some<ine coming in from out
of town because they know th~ town, the
hazard,, of the different beaches, and our
unique operating procedure.
"And after working with them for ten
years, we know just what they'rlr;c:apa.ble
of,'' Chere added. "They've had ten
years of lessons on how to become a
lifeguard."
nus year's rookies include Bill Brown,
Mike Contino, John Enfield, Jell Quam,
John Slowsky, Dilk Van Deusen, Charlie
and Digger Ware, and Earl Welles{ry. All
but Contino and Digger Ware hare been
in lhe complete eight year program -to
become the first "graduating clan" of
the lifeguard program, from Sea Cubs
through Rookie Guard.
''And there are !O many kids who were
In the program at one time, who are now
surfers at our local beaches. They make
rescues that we seldom hear about -
they're sort of the unsung heroes of
Laguna Beach,'' Ghere said.
The program is on the grow. Last year
there .were 35 junior guards. This year
there is an expected turnout of 50. About
300 Sea Cubs have graduated into the
Junior Guard category over the yars,
Ghere estlmated.
"Th.is program ls unique to our beach.
There isn 't one other department along
the California coast that can boast of a
program like ours," Ghere said.
Laguna Beach Lifeguards believe they
have a good thing going.
Capo R,ejects R~ Line
To Sand Deposit in Viejo
San Juan Capislrano city councilmen
~1onday denied permission for the con·
struc,ion af a railroad spur line through
U1e city to the ?-.1ission Viejo Ranch .site
of a silica sand depos it.
The council cited noise and danger to
city residents as one reason for the re--
jection and noted that the spur line would
mean nothing In it.self for the city.
1'As long as the people of San Juan
Capistrano gain no benefit (from the
railroad line), J would be opposed to it,"
?o.1ayor Edward Chermak said.
The line to be built by Owens·lllinols,
would have hauled the silica sand used
for making glass frOm the mining site
south of the Ortega Highway to east of
San Juan Creek bridge to a siding at the
Sante Fe mail line along the south side of
'Heritage Trees'
Protection Due
A proposed law to protect Laguna's
"heritage trees'' from the ax is likely to
surface at some August City Council
session.
the San Juan Flood Control Channel.
The council was told that in .lieu of rail
shipment, some 33 truck trips would be
made daily from the sand deposit to the
siding. Another 33 trucks would be used
daily regardless of the spur, Owens-
lUinois representative S. J. Blair said.
It is estimated that about 450,000 tons
of sand will be mined from the site in the
first year and that this would increase
e~·entually to M0,000 toru per year. A 40-
year supply of sand is said to be at the
deposit.
Blair was praised by f\layor Chermak
for his work with the city in investigatin&
the spur line.
ln other action Monday, the city coun·
cil:
-Approved for purchase a $60,000 2.5
acre park site in the san Juan Hills
development area near Via Madonna
street. The property has been appraised
at $91,000 and is owned by Kolbet of
Newport Beach.
-Approved a merit salary increase for
Harold Albert, city finance director, fMllll
$940 to $992 a month.
-Approved the attendance ol Ernest
Thompson, city a.dm.inistrator, at the
Solid Waste Management Institute in San
Francisco Thursday.
-Delayed consideration or the city's
$1.4 million budget until June 30 special
meeting.
,.. ........ . . -· . . . . -.
Columnist Pegler Die~
I
From Pagel
PAGEANT ..•
side Picasso's "'The Tragedy" from his
blue period.
Another that is sure to be a crowd
pleaser is the Pageant creation of "The
Rocket Thrower" a work that stood 4f>.
feet high at the New York World'.s Fair
of 1984-65.
In a difficult pose, Robert Mock of
r-.tanhattan beach is stopped in moUon as
he bunches his muscles to hurl the
missile skyward.
"Chlld~n By The Sea" 1hows the
wann colors and light of American im-
pressionist Edward Henry Potthast in a
typical American beach acene.
Frederic:: Remington's . "The Smoke
Signal" 1J. 1lJ.a{p In detail and cokfr con·
lra ~atene•of American~:· A
Ont'.-iif-.lthe ~ vivid cOiifil!is ~
veiled by ·wtlliamson was lhe old ~na ~
new Olympic Awards. It ls two subjecb.
One 8 modem Gold Medal like the one
won by Lagunan Bill Toomey in the 19811
decathlon in Mexico City. -, •
The other award is a decorative vase 6f
the type given winners of the originll
games held every four years at the plain
of Olympia in Elis, Greece.
The 26 subjects in this year's Pageant
"'ill be about 80 percent new with three
favorites from last year repeated and, of ..
course, the traditional closing repeat,
da Vinci's "Last Supper."
Santa Ana l\1an Dies
In Vietnan1 Action
Navy Photographer's r-.fate IC Robert
G. Strickland of Santa Ana, died in Viet·
nam action, the·u.s. Defense Department
announced Monday.
The husband of ~Irs. Constance E.
Strickland, 3512 W. C h e .s t n u t St.,
Strlckland was one of 116 American
servicemen killed In action recently.
Scientist Succunths
NEW YORK (UPI) -Rocket scientist
\\'lllle Ley, an adviser on this country's
Apollo space program, collapsed and died
in his home Tuesday. He "'IS 62 years
old.
L
Capo Airport Operating
While Struggle Goes On
Capistrano Air~rt, Orange County's
"orphan" flying field in the South Orange
Coast area, is back on a month·to-month
operating basis this week while county of-
ficials, San Juan Capistrano city ex·
ecutlves and the airport's operator.s
struggle to reach an agreement.
Thal struggle that has been going on
for the past four years.
At issue Is 5.« acres of county flood
control district property which is used as
the south half of the airport runway.
Operators Bruce Winton and Julian
Willcox have been negotiaiilng with the
county for two ... yean ~r this r-key
acreage. • _ ~ 4 ••; IQ._S'f ~t the operators cll1ij liMnf-caenot af-
fo rd lo buy the land 11t'thfi?1·,co:i value
placed on It by couiity Re.at Property
Services Director Sta~ JCraUse.
RENT IDKED
The 5.44 acres bavilaeeu leased to the
airport owners for thi"j53.st three years at
$50 a month by the Flood Control
District. That rental has now been peg-
ged at $160 a month until the hassle is,
settled.
In the meantime, the cily of San Juan
Capistrano has gotten into the act with a
proposal to buy the disputed acreage
from the county and lease it to the
airport.
But the ny in the ointment is the city's
proposal that a new appraisal of the land
be made and that the city purchase It at
halt that appraisal on a no·interest con·
tract over 15 years.
The city agrees that when the property
is no longer used for an airport -a
distinct possibility in a few year& because
of urban growth -It will pay off the 50
percent balance at the appraised price in
1969.
SUPERVISORS BALK
County supervisors balked at this idea,
staling that the balance should be paid
off, if and when, at the appraised market
value at that time. They said that 61h
percent Interest should be paid on the SO
percent purchase price. also.
The San Juan proposal came to a vote
last Wednesday and the count was 3 to Z
for the deal as outlined by the
supervlaors. Howe\'er, a four.fifths vote
is required on the sale of county property
and the motion was lost.
TWO OPPOSED
Opposing were supervisors David L.
Baker and Robert W. Battin. Baker call•'
ed the proposal deal "subterfuge in ill
rawest form . We would be laying
ourselves, the city and the operators open
to a Grand Jury investigation.
"The city wants to buy the land with no
down payment and no i n t e r e s t
payments,'' Baker continued. "The city ii
not investing a dollar and J)lans to lea!f
lo a private party who will reap the
b&oefit...!'~
The board voted unanimously to con·
tlnue the month.to-month lease at the
new $150 a month rental.
"Tell me, what do we do now," a!ked
\Vinton, when the votes were completed.
He didn't gel an answer and there was no
determination as to when an answer will
be forthcoming. It has taken four years
to get thii::fi.r.
Child Neglect
Against Laguna
Sitter Dropped
A felony chlld neglect charge against a
Laguna Beach babysitter has bee11
dismissed in municipal court and a lesser
misdemeanor charge is to be filed .
Ruth Louise DunLavey, 52, of 790 N.
Coast Highway, has pleaded innocent to
the lesser charge. A jury trial has been
scheduled in municipal court for July 29.
She is fr ee on her own recognizance
and is represented by the public
defender.
Mrs. DunLavey was arrested by
Laguna Beach police officers on the wed·
ding day of Lhe 20-month--0ld boy 's
mother, Carolyn Howe, and Laguna
Detective Gene Brooks.
(1"110~ (OAS I P'Uf.l UHINO C'OM.MfllT
~.ffrt N. 'W114 "I'll"'"' Mii l"Wllallu
Councilman Roy Holm broached the
matter to fellow councilmen We<:nesday.
ri.tentioning Lagun a's large number of
unusual and beauti£ul trees, he submltled
a copy of San Matet's lree-<:onservaUon Tax Rate to Drop
Police went to the DunLavey residence
f\1ay 13 after a report lhat the little boy
had been kidnaped, officers said. With a
neighbor's help, they said they found the
child outside "'here h~ had tumbled down
11 brushy slope tietween two hou.ses.
J1tk l . C11rley Vb""'"'"'_. o-t ............
n.,.. •• 1(,,.,n
l'Ol!W
T•1111t1 A. M•?hin1
Mtnemlftl t!.tl!IW
llit.h•"' P', N•ll
L-&tKli
City ltll!Ot
ordinance. ' ..
It prohibits removal of heritage trees in
the city with exceptions such as public
i;afety or interference with franchised
public utilities. With exceptions, a per·
mit is needed to remove a heritage tree
in San Mateo.
A heritage tree is defined as one with
l1i$torical significa nce or that has taken
on an aura of historical appeal . It refers
10 types trees and sizes beginning with
trees of 50·inch trunk circumference.
Pendleton Base
'Bell Call' Ends
Operation "Bell Call'' at Camp
Pendleton r-1arine Base was expected to
end this afternoon.
The attack began list week when the
largest amphibious training exercise on
the West Coast sinet. 1967 got under way.
The 13th ~tarlne Expeditionary Brigade
and Sth Mar ine Di vision were supported
by planes of the 3rd A1arlne Aircraft
Wing when they landed on White Beach
Jor the start of the mock baUle Friday.
Commandant or the f\farine Corps,
General Leonard f , Chapman was on
hnnd for the opening maneuvers.
Saddlehack Cuts Budget
A majority of Saddleback College
trustees Monday night voted to cut sharp-
ly reserves in next year's budget lo keep
the tax rate down.
Board members 1.iichael Collins. Hans
Vogel and Patrick Backus balloted to
reduce re.serves from 14 percent ol this
year's budget to an estimated three per·
cent next year.
Lou Zitnik voted no and Alyn Brannon
abstained.
Lowering the reserves and leaving in-
tact other preliminary budget requCj;ts
will allow the ta1 rate for next year to be
f>3 cents. down from 71 cents per SUKI of
assessed valuation this past school year,
The tax rate is to be made up of «I
<'ents for current e1penaes and 13 cent1
for long·term redt'lmptlon of bulldlna
bOnds, both at the same level u lh11
year. An additional 18 cents this yeAr
r.ald expenses to nclghborlr\I junior col·
ege districts for students educated in
1967-68.
Saddleback area sophomores in 1MM9
attended nc\ghborlni Jun Io r college
l.
districls free to local taxpayers because
of a tax exemption for new districts just
getting off the ground.
Next ·fall both freshmen and
sophornores will attend Saddleback.
The battle of the reserves havini been
won by the three most politically-con·
servaUve trustees, the !:Umnt e1penses
budRel for next sthool year will be 1\1~
milted in preliminary from to the C.OUnty
Schools OOJce ln the amount of $S.S
million.
This year the total was $1.6 million to
take cari of needs of 900 students. Next
year it ls estimated enrollment wlll be
about 1,900.
U1lng those figures, money "'lipent per
student wlll be rtductd from St.SM this
past year to Sl.550 next year.
The board also approved submission ()f
3 separate $6.4 m11Uon buildl111 ~get
for the year.
Saddlebtck's Bu1lntss Managtr Roy
Barletta said reserve funds are used for
two purposes.
The first is conUnsency money to tall
back on In case of emergency. The 14
percent reserves this year were not cut
into at all for contingencies.
The second purpose is to have ready
cash available for current operating ex-
penses. Tai money does not come Jn year
around, but salaries and bills must be
paid from month to month.
"Like any business a school district
must have working capital," Barletta
.~id. "You wouldn 't wait until you col·
lected a bill to pay your obligation."
With reserves at a low three percent
leve l It will be necessary for Saddleback
College to borrow money from a bank,
paying Interest on H, to tide the district
over. Barletta said.
Mo.,t llll Jehool districts must borrow
at some time during the year, but the
reserve level determines how much they
must borrow and lnttrtst pay.
The three perctnt reserves may be
built back higher I( final aues.sed valua-
tion figure• In mid July ahow more tax
base than now estimated. If 10, trusteell
~aid they would put the additional In the
reserve fund.
Pendleton Brig
Brawl Hurts 26
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -One
guard and ZS prisoners were treated for
injuries after a brawl Sunday night
between inmates at the Camp Pendleton
J\larine Base brig, officials reported Mon·
day.
The guard and one prisoner required
hospitalization, but names of the ~1arines
involved were not released.
The fight was between white and Negro
prisoners in a compound used by 250 in·
mates, officials said. Not all of the in·
matea took part and lhert wu no at-
tempt to breei: out, they Q.id.
Blacks, Police Clash
HARRISBURG, Pa. IAPI -Al leasl
eight persons were arrested and fi ve
others injured Monday night In a rock-
throWing confronUitlon between about 100
Negroes and policemen.
Almott 100 patrolmen and 1tatt1
policemen moved into this capitol city's
Hill Section after the distu rbances broke
out.
l
. . . . ..
(:andlelight ' ' : Killer Turns ..
Him self .In
'
• 11Candlellght killer'' Robert Willard
Uberty ii back In custody today. three
weeks after he walked to freedom from
an open ward at Metropolitan State
Hospital In Norw•ll<. .
But the former mental paUent almMt
had to persuade Oranee County shertfPa
effJcers to take him back, despite rtporU
this past week that the hunt for the 21~
year-old Westmlnlter me wa1 beinc
... intensified."
Liberty checked In Maoday •t pie of.
nee of hb attorney, Julius· Austero of
Garden Grove, and asked Auattro if it
waa true that he was the subject of a
searth. He told hill lawyer tilat ht bad
~n visiting friends in Ortgon and had
only learned m his return that be was on
the wanled list.
Llberty bad to wait for aome hours in
Austero's office while sheti!f's in-
vestigators and diatrid attorney'• of-
ficers got lhelr signals uncrossed . He was
then rushed to Orange COunty Medical
Center where he will be held pending the
aetting of a court hearing.
It was at a court hearing thtte weeks
4go that the flight of Liberty from the
Norwalk faclllty .was first made public.
Deputy District Attorney Al Wells con..
demned the carelessness of Norwalk
authorities for allowing "a dangerous
man like Liberty to walk away from his
ward in such a ridiculously easy man-
ner."
Wells later dismissed hospital protests
that Wberty's release was occasioned by
a !'clerical error." The angcy prosecutor
accused the hospital of s t a m p i n g
"discharged'' on the records of patients
who had actually escaped from the facili.
ty.
Liberty got the label "candlelight
killer" from officers who investigated the
bi.wTe slaying of Mrs. Marcella Landis.
the attractive brunette who shared his
apartment at 8382 Westminster Ave.,
Westminster.
Officers said they round Liberty on
June 4, 1966, strumming his guitar and
softly singing while the body of his
paramour lay draped across a living
room sofa. Astonished officers noted that
Liberty had set burning candles all
around the body of his alleged victim.
Both Liberty and the stranglet.1 victim
had long records of mental illness and
both had been diagnosed and treated in
the mental ward of Orange County
Medical Center. Both, it was later
discovered, had made sevetal ~
cessful suicide attempts.
Liberty was sent to Atascadero after 1
Superior Court judge ruled that the
Westminster man waa in&ane and unable
to assist in his own defense."
He is today regarded as sane ~iby
Atascadero and Metropolitan S t-Al t
Hospital officials.
Arab Commandos
Blolv Pipelines
In Daring Raid
By United Press International
Arab commandos in their most daring
raid since end of the June 19'7 war blew
up four 12-inch oil pipelines in the Israeli
port of Haifa today. setUng fires that
blazed for hours. The tempo of fighting
along the Suez Canal increased and there
were air artillery and land batUes.
An Israeli spokesman in Tel Aviv said
Israeli jets shot down an Egyptian MIG in
a dogfight over the Gulf of Suez. An
EgypUan spokesman reported an Israeli
plane shot down in the fight and said
Egyptian commandos wiped out an
Israeli anny base across the canal, kill·
ing 22 men.
Haifa i! one of Israel's major cities on
the Mediterranean 52 miles north of Tel
Aviv and the country's main port. Israeli
police 18..id the commandos struck around
8 a.m., blowing up the four pipelines and
spilling r.500 tons of blazing fuel.
Firemen fought the blate with foam for
four hours before they brought It under
control, but minor fires blazed for houn
alterwards, witnesses reported.
. .. -----~..,------,----..,......~~~ ....... _ ............ _ ........ ~ .... _,, ........ -·· -... . ---.
DAU. i' 'II.Of "'*-~ 0. .. """""'
'
Tutl4u, Junt 24, 1969 · L OAILY l'JLOT jl
' .
Sex Class Curb OK'd
Schmitz _Legislation Passes Big H_urdle
SACl\AMENTO (UPf) Th•
Je1ialature'1 main blll to control sex
educaUon hu cleared a ~I hurdle
followln& 0 Wunint tllot odliooll ml&f>t
point children toward a Ute ·of
"pervenlon, homoeexuallty, promlacutty
and prostitution."
The bill, •lrei<ly paaod by the 5ellato.
would pennlt a paren~ to withdnw his
child from a sex education course ·he
didn't like.
The measure w11 approved Mooday
nJght by the Assembly F.ducation Sub.
committee OP lnstruetJon and Teacher
Rebllons.
1be only auboommittee member who
opposed the bill WOI Auemblyman John
Vuconcelloo co.san Jose).
"All this does," he conlended, "ls pro.
ject our fears of sex upon our ebildrtn
and drl.vt: another wedge between the
adults, who call the shots, and the kids,
who are trying to l~arn.
'"Jbert's nothing k.lds are more curioos
about -and adults too, I Wnt -than sex."
The bill moved to the full education
commtttee. U aucceasful Uitre, It will be
debaled on the Alle!nbly floor.
The author, Sen. John G. Schmitz (~
TuaUn), said he now feels 11rather con·
fiderit" about. final pusage. "This was
the big hearing," be 1aJd.
Under the bill, 1 school could not re.
quire th.It a pupU attend 1 clan where
"human rtproducUve organs and tbelr
fWlCllon11&nd proce1111 are descrJbed, U.
hlltrlled or d11cuae4."
A ICbool would hava to inform a parent
Jn wrtUna that a sex education clasa was
pt.Med. Tho puent could no1111 tho
1Choo1 in writing his child was not to at·
tenet The parent also could · ):Mpect the
instructional material. '
"I thlnt a C1tholic parent ought to
have the same right against con·
traceptive teaching as an 1tbeist parent
has against prayers in the claas:room,11
aald Schmitz, a Roman Catholic.
"My bill calla for nottung lea.s than
what the alheista have betn given by
Supreme Court decisions."
One supporter, Dr. Allen E, Priest of
Sacramento, contended 1ex education
"will lead to a generaUon of people in.
volved to a much gi-eater extent in
perversion, homoaexuallty, promiscuity
and prostitution." The phyak:lan saJd he
long hlls campaigned acalnst aex educa·
tion.
Crashes Hurt 100
Robbi Juda GI•-· -tins tM United Orthoc!ox Robbl!lote of Loo
Anf'le•, argued "ll we introduce .n
education into our 1ehool1 we will a:empt
parenta from their o11u1at1ooo" to teoch
it tbelnM:lves.
"We wut to prtpare them (childrtnl
for mllturlty," hi added, "but we don't
want to over pr.epare them."
An opponelll, Dr. John Tribbey. a
psychlatrilt and a part-time l~ctor at
the UC Dovls Medical School, called tho
measure "a throwback to the puritarucaJ
apprOach, II '
The subcommhtee'1 attitude wu sum·
med up by A!ffmblyman Leroy Greene
(D-Sacramento).,.
''I'm of the opinion 111 children lhoukl
take sex education courses," he aaid. ••sut there are a few wbo don't want it.
And the quesUon is, are we 1olng to over·
rid et hem."
Another subconlmtttee m e m b e r,
Assemblyman John L. E. Cnllier (ll·bos
Angeles). aaid "I don't think we' lhould
force this (set: ·education) down their
throata any mor~ than we should force a
religion down thelr throatl."
The bill was ~ oppoed by repreaen·
tatlves of teachers' lSIOClaUOJll.
Inner Tubes Are 'In' "Our chanca uied to be somewhat less
than S0..50. Now, lhey'rt somewhat more
than 50-50."
NEW YORK (UPI) -Two Long laland
Rail Road accidents, one a tw~traln col·
llslon In Pennsylvania staUQn injured
almost 100 persons Monday. Alf but four
were treated at hospitals and released.
T h e aeven--mtmber subcomrnJttee
delayed action on a reJOluUon by Schmitz
asking scboob to delay adding new aex
education classes unW the leeislature can
study the subject.
Orange Coast beachgoers John, 6, Sally, 7, and Jane Cole, 3, (from
left)' can find Uttle fault with airplane tire tube family acquired for
seven Cole children to play with. As anyone can plainly see, the giant
tube has a number of uses. All it takes is some imaginative little
people,
, .......................................•................ ,
I YOU GLAND I
: 2300 Harbor Blvd., Harbor shopping Center, Costa Mesa
I 5 20
s~\.I ,,~.,.4 -
,,~?~!"
V1£D· l JA 1u141 ::,., \0 ~ • '"~··' '" '" .... 28tft
• i • -I COME TO THE HOTIEST SALE OF THE YEAR ••• EVERY ITEM JlEDUCED IY. :
i :
!
Charge Dropped Against
All-nude Santa Ana Bar f
Contempt charges against a Santa Ana
bar at which all-nude entertairunent had
been banned were dismissed Monday
when the district attorney's office refused
to press charges.
Cleared by Superior Court Judge
Claude Owens was the Apartment (no
connection with the Apartment A-Go-Go),
a Main Street tavern which faces trial
with four other watering places on
:
charges of featuring bottomless en· i
tertalnment.
It has been alleged that the Apartment,
like the Apartment A-Go-Go, defied the i
court order by again puttfug on Its stage
all·nude performers. But prosecutors ei:-
plained that t8e bottom dropped out of t
the case Last week when Apartment A· t
Go-Oo manager Harry Maselli was t
cleared ol the charges. t
AT LEAST 20°/o to 75°/o ••• MANY OUTSTANDING BUYS AT BEL.OW OUR COST
- A SALE YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS ••• SO HURRY ••• IT WON'T LAST :
LONG
WE'LL REMAIN CLOSED TODAY, TUESDAY, TO PREPARE FOR
THIS FABULOUS MON!Y' SAVING EVENT!
OIRLI' .... suo BELU & FLAIRS .. _
INfANTI' SLEEPERS .... .... . ···-·-··-··········-···· ..
......... SNOOZT sns ""' ...
i!!',.
T-SHIRTS
BOYS
FLAIRS
,. hf't c.-.,
Vol. $1.19
INFANTS
INFANTS
KNIT
1ss GIRLS
TOPS-T ·SHIRTS
SI......_., .... ._
• TOPS •
• BLOUSES •
• T-SHIRTS • ., ...............
111 Ll111ltH 9•tllltltMI
39c
Y ..... SJ.II
GIRLS' 2ss • 3·PC. SHIFTS • ·
• BATHING SUITS
Rog. to $7
INFANTS'
,2 PC. 111
')
:
Spider Spree
Dismissal carries with it, however, the t
provi50 that the bir must not allow ils :
female entertainers to "defy the spirit of
the order" by wearing misleading in. :
novations in certain areu of the body. ·
Both bars have guaranteed tbit their t
~performers. will ·be .covered in, tbe Jow
pelvic area in the time preceding trial.
SUN SUITS 19 GIFTSm
144 BlOIJSU THER~~ $3.5o
t'o;;;";.;·
1
•
1·"-------t BLANK~
'Violin' Outbreak Brings All Kinds
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A man walked
ln and plunked a spider down on Delona
Davis' desk . Her big, gray·blue eyes got
bigger and grayer. But she didn't
scream.
The critter was In a pill)>oltle. He wa1
dead. Besides, she waa getting UBed to it.
This kind of thing had been going on
dozens of times a day for more than two
weeks.
AA receptlorilst for the county health of·
fice. the little brunette has been delugtd
with spiders, of al! shaP:s, colors a!ld
11i:tes -dead and ahve -111nce the begin·
nina: or lhe South Amerk:an violin spider
hunt. She prefers them dead.
It started when Mel Thompeon, a
naturalist found one of the brOlfll violin
spiders -·about lhe size of a diint -in a
suburban Sierra Madre park. Drop for
drop, the violin spider's venom is
deadlier than a ratllesnake'1.
Thompson found 54 more in a recrea·
lion building at the park. Then
researchers from the Unl•erslty of
50.Jthem California found a dozen in •
nearby women 's club and a church.
The county dl!patched .eight twtem·
packing spider hunters, armed with
specimen vials and flashlight!.
Building by building, nook by cranny.
the hunters turned up spider after spider.
Grand total: 103.
Quite a find, since South American
violin spiders -named for the light
violin·,haped marking on their backs -
had been seen but once before ·in North
America. That was six years i.go in Cam-
bridge. Mass.
Meanwhile. nearly every lime the
mailman arrived al Delona Oavli' desk,
he brought In a batch ol spiders, most of
lhem dead, in envelopes. And it see.med
every third person who walked ln the
door bad one Jn a jar, a matchbox or a
pill ~tle.
"They'rt trying to help," she •aid.
"But some of those spiders are pretty lJi·
ly. We get some prtlty big onea
sometimes. And when they're not dead,
rorget it!''
Few of the hundreds brought In were
South American violin spJden1. And
nobody has reported being bttttn.
William Wakiron, county entymologlat,
said he hopes to learn more about lhe
sptdet1' Ute habita -and how they sot
here ftom Soulh America.
,,
•
Lining up with them when the trial date
is set will be representativu of the
liarbor lnn, La Habra, the Country Girl
No. 2, Anaheim and the Vampire Room,
Santa Ana.
Many of the entertainers who put on t
their t,ottomless shows at the bars have :
been heavily fined with the alternative of
lengthy prtson stays. Among them ia
Carol Cybulski, 32, of Laguna Beach, who
drew a $5,000 fine or 500 days in jail for
her torrid, "Hey Jude" belly dancina: 1t
the Apartment A.co.Go.
Chinese Turn Back
'
GIRLS 29 Vol. $2.50
SHORTDSEETS 27.7 ... ·"-~~-u-• '_u_s _ __,,. ;~t:RT
OUR SHIRTS 199 R.,. $4 FROM Vol. to $5
FllRNITURf D£PT. ------soys GIRLS'
& will special order any piect
of furniture of your choice
PAJAMAS 299 For this special event w
aow:,s • .:Uv 20o/o
PAJAMAS 166
Vol. to $3
BOYS
T-SHIRTS 111
V~I. to $5 Pacifists' Boat
TOKYO (AP) -SiX American pacillsto
who sailed from Japan June 12 on a
gt'¥)dwill voyage to .Communist China
returned today and reported the Chinue
turned them away f r o m the port at
Shanghai.
No Lay·A·Ways • No Refund OFF I""'"'•°'"'"" .. ...._ '"'""~""' ifRM•IAs )88 ! t BANKAMERICARD • MASTBI CHARGE • CASH v.1. ,. $5 +
The American Frlends Service Com·
mlll<e In Tokyo, w h I c h had helped
organize the voyage ol. lhe 111).foot yacht
Phoeni.J:, said lbe Americans sailed beck to Nagasold.
I
L!.~~~!.~.~~~ ..... !-~-~-~-~-~-~-.• -.. -.-~-.-.-.-.-.-.-2·.-. 88-~-• .l
... --
'( DAllY '1lOT
-------------... -.. -..... -. .. '
•'
Tlltldly, Junt 24, 1'6•
. .. . .. . --·--••
Cargo Plane Smashes Miami Building
' '
''We don't know what happened, ..
said a spokesman as employes sat
in darkened offices in Salt Lake
City "Make it funny, 11 be said. "Say
we didn't pay our bill." The black~
out of several minutes was at the
main office of Utah Po w e r and
Light Co. •
The tttn Canteen cf GTtattT
Johnstown, Pa., doesn't like to
stt kids smoking, but it'.s got a
smoking room in the building
;u.it the same. And smack in its
center is a wooden cofftn filled
with .sand and 11ellowtd cigarette
butts. This is the a.thtralf. It'.s
called the Cancer Room, with 2;-
rays of good and bad lungs hang·
ing on the black wallt. It al.so
has oray drape.s ond eerie bhu
lighting.
DC-4 Holocaust Kills 10 ;
Damage Totals $1 Million
MIAMI (UPI) -The old. rour~nglne
plane, smoke pourJna: from Its Lall and
flames spewing from an engine, circled
like some stricken giant bird over the ci-
ty.
Then - a screaming, banging "ball of
fll'e" -it fell Monday toward a business
district on a busy alx-lane traffic artery
to Miami Intematlooal Airport.
"My God, it's going to era.sh," ~am
ed Antonio Cid over the telephone at a
service station. "It's going to hit us." A
man bolted fr om a truck. A woman
sprawled In her yard, covering her head
with her hands.
Other spectators watched horrified as
the lumbering Dominican AJrUnes cargo
plane sheered the roof off a two-story
medical center, bounced off the 36th
Street thoroughfare and slammed into an
automabile repair shop. Gasoline and
flaming wreckage shot over a two-block
area.
Ten persans were killed and 12 others
injured, one critically in the holocaust.
"It looked like the aftermath cf a
World War 11 bombing raid on London,"
said a fireman.
15. A pedestrian was killed by flying
wreckage.
Authorities said there was a possibility
there may be other bodies in the rubble,
where rescue squads worked through the
night.
Many of the victims were dismembered
or burned beyond recognition.
The scene. about five mile• from
downtown Miami, is a short distance
from where an El Salvador Airlines
carga plane crashed on takeoff in 1~,
killng two crewmen.
The DC4, carrying a general cargo and
bound for the Dominican Republic, ex-
perienced trouble before it cleared the
runway around 3:30 p.m. EDT.
"Smoke was coming from the tail of
th e plane when it was taking off from the
airport,'' said a Federal Aviation
Adrpinistration (FAA) controller.
The plane's no. 4 engine quit, but Bu·
josa climbed to 1,000 feet and began
circling. He asked for emergency
clearance to land. Then the no. 2 engine
burst into names.
Bujosa could no longer keep the
stricken plane in the cloudless sky. It
began falling.
U"I T•i.tlele • Howell i1ich. civic and business
leaders have honored one of the
best loved 'Citizens of this small
southeast Michigan community -
Willie Wr ight, a 911-year-old Negro
window washer. Nearly 150 friends
attended a birthday dinner to give
Wright a present of $CIOO. He says
be had never had a birthday party
before. Wright has lived in Howell
for 65 years and ts still washing
windows along Main Street as he
bas for nearly 50 years.
Police Lt. James Reese estimated that
property damage would total at lea.!lt $1
million.
Laz.ily circling over the teeming resort
city, it skimmed the traffic-laden Miami
Beach-Airport Expressway and sliced the
roof from the 36th Street Medical Center
with ita left wing. The fuselage jumped
the street and crashed into Charlie's AutG
Center.
AERIAL VIEW OF MIAMI AIR CRASH KILLING 10 SHOWS DEMOLISHED BUILDING
T1il SKtion of Dominican Airlines DC-4 Cargo Pli ne Can Be Sun Top Center
• Maidstone, England police said
they are hunting for police identi-
fication cards forged in the print·
Ing shop of the local prison. •
. l
' .. ' . ,\. .
; ... ,.
Britai"l1'S Prince Charle1 and his .SU..
1er Prince.ss Ann~. enjoy a royal romp
in Windson Great Park. Charlel will
bt invested as U1e Prince of Wales
JUl lJ I. • Bernadette Dtvlin, at 22, Britain's
youngest lawmaker, says she will
quit politics '"ithin the next two
years to go back to school. Miss
Devlin was elected lo the British
Parliament in April to represent
the Northern Ireland constituency
of i1id·Ulster after campaigning on
a platform of civil ri ghts for Ro-
man Catholics. "I have done my
job-J have no wi sh to become a pro-
fessional politician," she said Sun-
day. "I just 'vanl to go back to
studying psychiatry at Queen's
University, Belfast.''
Investigators from the N a t I o n a I
Transportation Board summoned airline
official.a: and Federal Aviation Agency
repreeentativea to a meeting later today
to try to find out what caused the ac-
cident
111e DC4, a plane which went out of
production in 1947, crashed lhree-
quarttra of a mile from a runway clear-
ed for Its emergency landln(. 111e four
crew members -Capt. Jorge Bujoea,
Copilot Carlos Brader, Flight Engineer
Carlos Gonzales and Caesar Molina -
were killed.
Five persons were killed in the garage,
Including the two sons cf the owner
Charlie KnaPiP -Clyde, 17, and Clifford,
The right wing and a fuel lank skidded
several hundred yards down the street,
engulfing a pinball and pool supply firm
Jn flames. One engine ·crushed an unoc·
cupied car. The plane's tail landed on an
outboard motor boat parked on a trailer
beside Knapp'• garage.
Miami MayGr Steve Clark said the
tragedy pointed up lhe need for phasing
out Miami lnt.ernatianal Airport, which
has between l ,100 and 1,200 flights dally,
to a new super jetport being constructed
in lhe Everglades.
Report Brings to Light
Crippling AEC Plant Fire
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. nuclear
missile production has been halted foc
perhaps the rest of this year because of a
crippling fire at an Atomic Energy Com-
mission plant.
Th.is rather stunning situation -still
tJnmentioned publicly by the government
-is disclosed in the back section of a
1,400-page volume cf official te stimony
recently released by a Senate ap-
propriatiom: subcommittee.
Government sources also give strong
indications that te1Ung al antimissile
Crim e Rate Rise
Marks Suburbia
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The crime
rate rose faster in tile suburbs than in the
cities during the first quarter o( 1969, the
FBl reported today.
The FBl's publication, UnUonn Crime
Reports, disclosed an average increase of
11 percent in suburban crime while the
average rase 10 percent in cities with
population of 100,000 or more compared
to the first quarter or 1968.
Nationally, the FBl's crime index
showed a 10 percent rise in crimes during
the three month period, wlt!J every
category showing an increase.
warheads may be delayed by" the blaze
that hit a plutorUum-handllng facility at
Rocky Falls, Colo., May II. The od)tlal
AEC position is that Safeguard deploy.
ment schedules will not be set back.
The impact of the fire, first serious
blaze at an AEC plant, was laid before
Congress behind closed doors nine da ys
later v.·hcn AEC leaders urgently ap-
pealed for $45 million to make repairs.
Most-·nuclear weapons requi r e
plutonium to trigger their atomic
warheads.
Air Force Maj . Gen. E. B. GiUer,
assigned to the AEC, told subcommittee
memben the impact on the weapons pro-
duction schedule would last "a few
months to perhaps a year," according to
prellmlnary estimates.
Sen. AJlen Ellender, l).La., asked
Giller: "Will this fire retard you in the
produc-tion of all missiles!"
Giller's immedia1' words in reply were
deleted from the published tl'allKript but
then he said: "We are estimating at this
moment six months plus or minus three,
meaning a maximum of maybe nine."
Dr. GleM T. Seaborg, AEC Chairman,
termed the $45 million request to gel the
Rocky -Flats plant back into operation
"very urgent."
"If we didn 't receive the additional ap-
propriation it would delay by an un-
determined amount the production dates
(deleted),~' Seaborg said.
Final Fueling
Prepares Apollo
For 'Big Test'
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Launch
crews pumped thousands of gallons cf
kerosene into Apollo ll's Saturn 5 booster
rocket today to prepare ror its last big
test before heading toward the moon July
16.
The four-hour fitst st.age fueling opera-
tian began at 7:30 a.m. PDT while
astronauts Nell A. Armstrong, Michael
Collins and Edwin E. AJdrin practiced
moonshlp Oying in spacecraft trainers.
Armstrong and Aldrin .,.. scheduled to
land on the moon July 20 while Collins
orbits the moon in a command ship.
The 363-foot apace machine's final ma-
jor ground test, a dress rehearsal
countdown, is scheduled to start at mkl-
rUght Thursday. It will put the rocket and
its Apollo spaceCraft through virtually
~very launch day operation except eng}pe
ignition.
"We'tt really sitting pretty," A-polio
Launch Operations Manager Paul C.
DoMelly s al d Monday as technicians
warked to finish the tlckUsb job of fueling
the three Apollo spacecraft modules and
the Saturn's orbital control system.
DoMelly called the job one of the most
hazardous in readying the spacecraft f<lr
flight. It involves filling tanks with
chemicals ao corrosive the men handling
them wear bulky protective suits and
masks.
The tedious s1>4cecraft fueling ran
almost a day behind and pushed back the
start of the full coontdown rthearsal
from Wednesday to Thursday midnight.
Donnelly, however, wasn't war r i e d
because he said the prelaunch timetable
~~'Jlearly a week of delay built into it.
.. We're better off than ever," he .said.
The astronauts spent most of Monday
practicing in a spacecraft si.rnulators and
pll}lned to keep this up for the rest of the
wetk. Today, they concentrated on the
re-entry phase at the end of their eight·
day flight.
'fhe ApollG 11 mission ends July 24 with
a splashdown In the Pacific Ocean.
Tornadoes Strike Again
Judy Ga r land
Overdose Reports
Called 'Rubbish'
R ain Adds to Woes in Northeaste rn Arkansm
Calltornla
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LONDON (AP) -Reports 5pe<:ulattng
that Judy Garland may have died from
an overdose of sleeping pills are "pure
rubbish," a Scotland Yard spokesman
says. A coroner has ordered an inquest
Wednesday into the death of the 47·year-
old star .
~ •0' Police said Monday there a number or '° pills in the singer's home when MJss
50 .10 Garland was found dead in her bathroom
~, .11 Sunday. The pills were no'i\'here near the
s.. Tr body but have been taken to Scotland
15 •0 Yard for examination, offitffs said. SI ,ll
n ss .os Pallet doctors perfarmed an autopsy
:~ ~! .u Monday but did not disclose the results.
u s1 "As of th is moment ncbody in the Yard
1;; :: .t! knows what she died from, or will we un-
1' s.. .ot lil we know the results of the autopsy," a
81 11 Id ,, '° police spokesman sa .
1?i ~! ,,. Doctors said following the au.topsy they
•• ..., - -~ • Wl!'!: taking some of Miss Garland's
:; :: •01 organs to a Scotland Yard laboratory for
" ',', further eiamlnalion. The organs were not " ,,. n 51 identUied.
;; :--She hid clfttioSts ol tht liver and had
n " been toki by a London surgeon that she ,:: ;t 1" was "living on bo1TOwed time."
;; ~ .• The physician, Dr. Phillip Lebon, said
n .a .u he and another doctor had examined Miss
~ ;.: Garland eight years ago and estimatt:d
'1 St then she had no more than five years to
M .. n s1 llve.
71 ~ ·•• Lebon said he httd "read the riot ad ..
:: st 1' to Miss Garland and had wamed her not
:; ~ ·'' to drink. She was known as a heavy
• n ,., drinker and for years had consumed
';; ~ many kinds of pilla.
·we Ser'7e Pnhli~~.
Warren Replies to Nixon Charges .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon'.s highly unusual appearance before
the Supreme Court Monday gave Earl
Warren a chance to 1ay some things lhat
probably had been on his mind for some
lime.
The retiring chief justice's response to
Nixon's eulogy contained thoughts which
he perhaRS woold like to have voiced dur-
ing the 1988 presidential campaign.
In those weeks Nixon was saying recent
Supreme Court decisions had given "a
green light" to people bent on a life of
crime. He was promising to nn court
vacancies with "strict corutructionists"
of the Constitution.
But Monday the · President praised
Warren's "dlgnity. example. and
fairness" and said he bu "helped keep
America on the path of CQDUnWty and
change which ls so essenUal for our pro-
gress." '
Jn reply Wamn retJllnded the Presi-
dent the court has nO constituency and
serves no mpjority or minori ty.
"W.e serve only the public interest as
we see it, guided only by the Cotutltution
and our own consciences," Warren said
in a mild tone.
No one could think of a time when. a
president has addressed the Supreme
Court. Nonnally the Cont.act between tlie
judicial and executive branches is con-
fined to the law suits that come befare
the high tribunal and an annual reception
for Supreme Court jmtices at the Whit~
House. Nixon himself l<lld newsmen aftef!
appointing Warren E. Burger as wa.r:
ren's successor that he believed a presi~
dent and a justice should keep their
distance.
Nixon did not explain why he chose to
step over the barrier M o n d a y ,
Furthermore, political enmity between
him and Warren bad dated back to 19S2,
when Nixon worked for Dwight D.
Eisenhower in California's Republicao
convention delegation headed by Warren,
the state's gavemor.
Despite some tiffs in the meantime and
Nixon's cootlnuous criticism of the court
in the recent campaign, the relalklnship
between the two appeared to have sof·
tened w1len Warren participated at Nix·
on's inaugural oath-laking.
Earlier the . presiden~lect aske<I" War·
ren to continue serving to the end of the
Ctttrent tenn. Warren's acquiescence
solved an e"rnbarrassing problem at the
time. He already had resigned but had
started the 1968-69 tenn because the
Senate had rejected President Lyndon B.
Jol}nson's nomination "of fonner justice
Ahe·Fortas to succeed him.
After naming. Burger, a member of the
U.S. Court of Appeals here, Nixon called
an unusual news conference in which he
explained bow he undertook the ap-
pointment.
HEW Appointment
Finch Wins on l(nowles
ButParty FightPossible
WASHINGTON (AP) -Robert H.
Finch, long a confidant and political ally
of President Nixon , apparently has won
his fight to have Dr. John H. Knowles
nolninated as the nation's No. I heailh of·
ficer.
But the victory raises the specter of a
party-spl\tling battle in the Senate, with
the admlnlstralion and a C<N11itlon of
generally liberal GOP Young Turks pitted
against the venerable Republican leader,
Everett M. Dirksen.
It was learned Monday night Nixon is
almost certain to nominate Kncwles as
assistant sttretary for health and scien-
tific affairs in the Health, Educl.Uon and
Y.'eUare Department.
Knowles, HEW Secretary Finch's long·
time choice, has been opposed by
powerful elemenls In the American
htedical Associatlan and its prominent
all y, Dirksen.
Knowles is director of 1'.tassachusetts
General Haspltal In Boston, and until
Monday the AMA opposition had been at.
tribuled to his advocacy of such things as
unlversal health care plans.
But a Wheaton, Md., ph.ysician, Dr.
James J. Nordlund, said in a letter ta
The Washington Post that Dirksen'• ad-
mlnlstraUve assistant, John R. Gomien,
had told him that "because of the heavy
financial support given Lhe Republicans
dufing the recent elections, the American
Medical APoclatlon was insistent on
nomlnaling one aMlstant secretary, In
particular the asslitant secretary for
health and sctenUnc al fain."
Gomlen did not deny the report The
AMA had no comment
Knowles 1ald at his MasstchuMtlS
summtr home Monday night the unof·
flcial rtpcrts were "new5 to me. I
haven't heard a peep."
If Dirkatn 1tlcks to his opposition, the
Issue of who is lo be assisl.llnt secrttary
\VII\ pele beside the larger Wue of who
controls presi dential nominations, l he
President or Sen. Dirksen.
Oirk.<>en ch1ims credit for blocking
other Nixon appointmenu and for forcing
the removal ol.,.one holdover DemocraUc
official.
u ... , .....
CENTER OF STORM
Dr. J ohn H. Knowl11
But the llllnols senator ha1 no liking for
a slx>wdown that could, ll he IOV, serious·
ly damage bi& prestige as party k!ader
and thus crimp hir; power .
Dirksen has been noted in the past for
his agility in changing pos ilioru on maiol
Issues and personallUes, but has been un-
communicaUve about a switch on
Knowles.
But if the nomln&l\on arrives in the
Senate wilhout oome 110rt of ~
commodatlon, the re!lulting fight would
Advertise to the country the kind of
Republletin liberal-conservative split that
has pla&Ued the Democrats (or year1.
. . ·-. . . ----------~-------.... .... ............. ~.~ ............. _. • ~. , • ¥. .. -.... -........ ~ ......... ' ., _..., ~.-.. -........ ·--. ..----...... --
.Auxiliary, You've a·
' "You've Come a Long Way, Baby," is the turle generally h·eard
around the Auxilia of ice of South Coast Co munit Hos 'ta! these d s. ~~
/ ''Baby," in thi case, is both the hospital, which ceJebrates its 10th
a1iniv~rsary Tuesday\ July 1, and the dedicated, \Vomen who have su~
port"'! it.
And 'there will be plenty of time for reminiscing when the auxiliary
hosts a luncheon and brief program in the Newporter Inn honoring some
of the women who made the hospital possible on the ann·iversary of its
opening and dedication.
•. While. the hospital \Vas in the first planning stage, a group o{ women
began organizing themselves 3..nd planning how' they could carry their
share of the burden both physically and financially.
Thet.r first step \Vas to ask for volunteers who woul<i pledge $25,000
to\vard the building fund . Forty women raised their hands and personally
underwrote the full amount. The pledge was fully paid within three years
and another $25,000 pledge was made immediately~ for during the interim,
tl}e auxiliary had organized and was a working group. The second pledge,
paid within two ye ars, was followed by another and yet another pledge .
and by 1965 the auxiliary bad contributed $100,000 towards the building
fund.
Today the auxiliary, with a membership of over 400 \\'omen, con-
tributes more than 39,000 hours of service each year and carries a pledge
of $100,000 .
To applaud. accomplishments oi the hospital and its supporters the
auxiliary has extended special invitations to the original women who made
the first $25,000 pledge to be honored guests at the anniversary luncheon.
Festivities will begin with a social hour at 11 : 30 a.m., followed by lunch·
eon at 12:30 p.m.
Auxiliary members and friends of the hospital are invited to attend.
Reservations may be obtained by sending $4 to Mrs. Violet Adams, 2730
Salano Way by next Friday or calling~her at 494-7096.
JEAN COX, 494-9466
Tunt11r, Junt 24, lHt r.. Patt II
LEARNING -Stanley Volga, hospital administrator, shows a breath·
r1 lng machine , also in the cardiac pulmonary section to (left to right)
~ Mrs. Jack M. Lyons. auxiliary president, and Mrs. Harry La wrence,
associate member and ope of the ori ginal ~upporters.
HOSPITAL WITH A HEAR'!' -Two of the 40 wom-
en who made the original $25,000 pledge to South
COast Community Hospital (left to right) Mrs. Sam
Garst and Mrs. Jose Rosan get an explanation of
AUDITORIUM? What was built to serve as South ·Coast Com-
munity Hos·pital's auditorium -now, due to lack of space, must
also se rve as its bu.c,i,ess offic~. When the hospital celebrates
Lo ·ng Way
the Cardfac Pulmonary Section's DR 8 recorder
from Vicfor Andrews, hospital board chairman and
former president.
( -
the tenth' anniversary of its opening and dedication Tuesday.
July 1, t~e auxiliary will host a luncheon and program honor-
ing some of the women who made it possible.
Luck's No Lady: P"oint of Frie:r1d.ship Made the Hard Way
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A girl I work
with is a fanta stically lucky crap shooter.
Whenever she has the dice everyone rides
her back and cleans up. I've seen her
make as many ils seven passes in a row.
Two weeks ago Lucky went to Puerto
Rico for her vacation. I knew she'd be in
the casinos every night -and winning, of
course -so I gave her $150 to play for
me. I made it plain that if she blew it I
wouldn't be mad, although I've never
known her to lose.
Two days after Lucky left for her vaca~
tion, I received -a telegram which said, "I
hit a lousy streak and lost your dough . So
Sorry ." I was really shook. but figured it
-was bound to happen eventually.
I I
,
Yesterday Lucky returrled. She, was
telling the girls in the cafeteria that she
had_ had a great time -won $600 over
and abc>ve her exper:ses. Whe she saw me
s!anding there, she said, "Too bad about
your $150.-~iy luck changec:trlght alter I
lost yours, 11oney."
What do you think of a friend like that?
-CHICKEN INSPECTOR 21
DEAR CIUCK• I think 11'1 worlll 1110
to find out wbal kind of 1 fritnd the wa1.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My bo}'friend
Is taJr.ing a cOtlege summer session in
another' city; He professeJ his undying
lovti for me -in wriUng. His letters are
wildly passionate and highly dlScriptive.
I would die lf a member of the family
· opefled one by mistake.
In yesterday's letter he admonished me
for .1\0t responding in' equally ardent ' . language. He.says my letters are guard·
ed and ncncommltlal. Now I'm beginning
to wonder if he writes those torrid letters
for his own· erotic pleasure and wishes
me to respond in kind for additional
stimulation, or if he wants me to put it in
writing so he can show his friend s? -
BIG DOLLY
P~R._ DQ_µ.: It's enUrely possible
U.1t your boyfriend 1et his jollies from
composln& red•hot epltdes. Bat he sborild
bura 'em, not mall 'em. Eiplaln th1t lie
-----------------------------------------·-------~--
mu1t not put In writing anything he
wduldn 't want rtlid aloud io your mother
' -Anti that you prac~ce what you preach.
DEAR ANN LANDERS; ·tty cousin
married three months ago. She is so
proud of having snagged a profeS!ional
man it's revolting. The payoff Is thls:-Shc
Introduces herself as Mrs. Dr. What-
chmacalJH. The other day when I told her
it was not In good taste, she replied , "It
saves time. W}'len . I say Mrs. Whal·
chamacallit, •people always ask if I'm
relateif tc. the eye speelallst."
Who is rlghl? -FEET FIRST
DEA.R FEET: You are. of coune, bot
conserve your breath lo cool your soup,
Lovey. Your cousin is not lnte~1ted In
taste -she's interested only In letUng
people know she married a doctor.
Alcohol is no shortcut to social success..
If you think you have to drlnk to be ~
ccpted by your friends, get the facu.
Read "Booze and You -For Teenagers
Only,· by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents in
coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request.
Ann Landers will be glad to help
you with your problems. Send them to
her in care of the DAILY PILOT, enclQ3oo
Ing a self-addressed, stamped envelope.
I
-.. ----..---.... _.. ........... ~ ... .. ... . . . , . • .. -'I ... .-....... .-;: .. -.. . . ; ;
DAtlY "LOT
. . .
Position
Retained
Retaining the chairman's
_gfjvel of the \\1orn~....A~
Uiary to the American Soc iety
or Mechanical Engineers, Los
Angeles Section will be Mrs.
Harold S. Spaulding.
lnslallation ceremonies will
take place during the annual
luncheon n1eeling 'fhursday,
June 26, at 11 a.in . in the
Bluffs, Ne"•port Beach, hosted
by J\1rs. Joseph C. \Vidmont
Jr.
others taking offi ce during
ceremonies conducted by P.1rs.
Robert \V. Cockrell , past
chairman. \viii be the J\trne s.
Alfred A. Lingo. v i c e
chairman: George J. Barnett
and Ra ymond C. K e II y ,
secretaries. and Arthur E.
Bender, treasurer.
During an open house in lhe
\Vldmont residence fol!o"·ing
luncheon, Mrs. H. J. Keeling
will be recogni zed for 25 years
of membership in the aux-,
lliary.
Assisting "'ith the open
house wi ll be the ~Imes. CJ:iy
· T. Coley, Arthur E. Geisler
and Kelly.
. . . . . . # •••••• • • j . • • • • •
GOODBYE, MOMMY -Sending Mrs. Charles Mar-
vin of,f. for a busy year of activity are twin daugh-
ters Kimberly (left) and Holly, 7. Mrs. Marvin was
installed as president and the Orange Coast Mothers
of Twins Club celebrated its fir st anniversary dur-
ing a dinner meeting in Francois restaurant, l-Iunt·
ington Beach.
Poolside
Setting
For Style
•
Beaut y Is Growing Thing s
Mother 's Club Lights Golden Club Arranges
Rummage Sale Variety
Givin g serricc to comn1unily and school arc students fron1 Village Vie\v School
\rho .ire contribuling lOll'ard f1un tington Beach beautification projects. Cooper-
A poolside fashion sho1v v.·ill at i n~ in purchasing a tree for the school grounds arc Bro\vnies an d C~arnp Fire
attract ntcmbers and guests of Girls (left to right ) Pam \Varren . Kelly \VaJker, Laura :riicCJel!an un d Ro.""t-
Candle on Anniversary the nobert F. Kenned y c M G K · ~1emoria! Society at II: 15 _a_n_n_c __ ·a_r_c_e_r_a_no_. __ r_s_. __ e_or_g~c __ r_o~p~p-1s_c_a_m_;_p_F_ir_c_g~u-a_r_d_i_a_n_. --------
a.m. Thursday,.June 26.
Membe rs modeling fashions
fr om La Scarpa . Seal Beach,
"'ill slroll th::-deck or the Hun-
tington Harbour Beach Club
for the second annual benefit
sponsored by the group.
Combining their first birth-
day celebration with the in·
stallation of new officers were
members of the Orange Coast
Mothers of Twins Club.
Heading the active grolJll of
40 members will be Mrs.
Charles Marvin of Fountain
Valley, president.
Newport Scene
For Business
Executive board member~
of the CaWornia Federation of
Women's Clubs, J uni o r
Membership will make the
Newporter Inn their· head-
quarters June 26-28 for their
annual summer bo a r d
meeting.
Hosting the event '\'ill be
members of Los Cerritos
District and thei r president,
11rs. Stephen Pustay.
Under consideration will be
-projects for chainnen, plan s
for area meetings and gener;il
organization of the new ad-
ministration.
Boredom Beat
By Brisk Pace
Do you have time on your
hands -are you bored -are
you new in the area?
If a "yes" answers any of
these questions. the Auxiliary
of Hoag Memorial Hospital in-
vites you to attend one of thei r
month I y membership
meetings to learn about the
\-olunteer opportunities arail-
able .
The next meeting will talle
place at 10 a.m. on Thursday,
June 26, in the hospital's
Conference Center. If you are
unable to attend at this time,
they are scheduled monthly on
the fourth Thursday.
For additional information
call Mrs. Robert Unger, 548-
8765.
LEGAL NOTICE
other members in arranging
the event. Horoscope Other officers, all from Hun-
tirlgton Beach, inst.ailed by
Mrs. Gene Mondon, 'Vestsidc
Mothers of "Twins. L o s
Angeles, jncluded the Mmes.
Richard Clifton and Jack
Taylor, vice presidents; Frank
Haroldson, recording
secrelary ; Charles Saunders,
corresponding secretary;
Richard Klosterman,
treasurer, and Do-nald
Stewart, parliamentarian.
Golden Harbor Club will of·
fer a wide collection of items
at a rummage sale scheduled
for Thursday, Friday and
Saturday,_ June 26 to 28.
Dishes, kitchen utemils and
other household accessorie!!
will be available along with
jewelry, toys and clothing. For
late shoppers, the sale at 867
W. 19th St. in Cosla Mesa will
be open until 8 p.m. June 26.
The doors will open at 9:30
a.m. all three days and close
at 5:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday.
Highlighting other club ac-
tivities will be a party at 8
p.1n. on Thursday, June 26, in.
Newport Beach P.f a s o n i c
Temple. Guests of Golden
Harbor White Shrine o f
Jerusalem wil! be the diamond
jubilee association of Southern
California shrines. Mr. and
Mrs. Alwyn Lane will replace
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Chapman
as watchman of shepherds and
worthy high priestess.
Reservations for the lun·
cheon show may be 1nade by
calling ~1rs. Fred Voss. FC!un-
tain Valley, or l\1rs. Ronald
Tepper, Huntington Beach.
Leo: Be Self-re lian1·
Mrs. Clifton re~ntly was
elected treasurer for the
Southei:n Calilomia Mothers of
Twins Clubs during a state
convention in San Diego.
Also attending t h e in-
stallation dinner in Francois
restaurant were members'
husbands.
Gilbert Seal, g e n e r a 1
chairman, will be assisted by
Mrs. Mi l dred Estep
chairman of the evening. will
be assisted by Mrs . Freda
Barnes.
Plans on the Menu
For Ebell Luncheon
The society, a community
service-oriented organization,
-now is co-sponsoring an arts
and crafts class in the Colonia
Juaret, Fountain Valley.
The next meeting will take
place in July when new offi-
cers will be elected and goals
for die coming year estab-
lished.
WEDNESDAY
JUN" 25
By SYDNEY 0~1ARR
nttention. Get fresh poir.t cf
\·ie\1·. Be independent v;ith::1t
displaying arrogance. A1·oid
or.e \Vho 11·ants to lie you up in
ARIES (March 21·April It): contract. \\lait and see.
Financial pressure evident. SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 22 ~
Forces are !!Cattered. Don't Dec .. 21): Guard health. Avoid
say yes to something you can-excess. Keep resolutions con·
not immediately a ff or d • cerning diet. Success o r
Trying to please others can be failure today depends upon
canled too far, you. Be recepUve, willing to
TAURUS (April 20 • May learn.
20); Lie low. Do more listen-CAPRICORN (Dec. 22:-Jan.
ing" than talk.Ing. What appear!! It~: ~ Ju~ a~pec~ today ~}... m 'ttee to be a burden is lifted-if you COlncldes with your abijlty to c vm I are' patient. Do detail work. be versatile. Your innuence
.-Get minor lasks completed. J··~~reads. P~le di s PI a Y
S.elects ;;:;~e big projects for another ,lt
greater c:on [ic!ence i:: your opl-
nior.s.
ACU ARlliS (Jan. 20·Feb.
18): Conflict 1nay exi s t
between duty and home.
Concentrate on basic tasks.
The large problems will take
care of themselves: Push
ahead. Those in authority are
on your side.
PISCES (F~b. 19-March 20):
Your mind may be on faraway
places. But don't permit this
to degenerate into m e r e
daydreaming. Take care with
what you re.ad and write. Be
aware of subtle nuances.
The club was founded by
~!rs. Ste111arl. ~1rs. ~larvin
and Mrs. Kloslf'r111an IJ pro-
\'ide mothers of multi ples an
opportunity to discuss mutual
problems, c o n d u c t philan-
thropic projecls. exchange
twins' clothing and equipment
and provide a social outlet.
Varied plans will be on, the McKinnon, state preside nt or GE~flNI (~fay 21.June 20): ,'.,1•
menu when the Junior Ebell California Federation of Chanee. variety are em-
Club of Ne'"·port Be a ch Women 's Clubs and ~1rs. A w • phasized. Much of what occurs
gathers for a I u n ch e 0 n Henry Koehler, state cor· Inner contains element of surprise.
"lillAT T'INliS
TO liO NATIVE IN "
meeting on Thursday, June 26. responding secretary . Plans are changed. Some
Tops A.d-Members will meet two Mrs. Jack Grundhofer will Deborah Babcock, valedic-around you appear morose.
I S special guests at the Mesa take charge of the luncheon tofian of Westminster High p;~:ecE~e(ft~~: 2~~~!!J:i~.
We• ht Verde home o[ Mrs. Harlow and join Mrs. Frank Hughes in Sch_QOl, was a\\•arded a $200 Relations with opJ>Oaite set IQ Y Richardson when the gather-. or'1anizing a white elephant· s ~h o 1 a rs hip by the are intensified. Emotions run
Problems . tlOam sae. with proceeds to aid \VeStminsterWoman'sClub. high; lo11ers'quarrel occursif 1ng convenes a · · health committee projects. car:f'' s with what you say.
M W F·x w ·, 11 H I M k So th' Out Co. mprlsinrr the scholarship " rs. anen 1 ow o a e me 1ng -"& Kl\ this and a c t ac-
A new TOPS Club has form-preside and present Mrs. Dan of Nothing wlll be the theme cbmrilitt~ were Mrs. Emory cordiilgly.
ed in Fountain Valley, and of the program prese nted by Clifton, chairman, Mrs. Da vid LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
membership is open to all the Mmes. Richardson and Ames and rt.1rs. R. E. Pace. What appears to be 8 definite
\vome.n in the area who are in-Moms Discuss Edward \Vhitehouse., ways and -Qtber iten1s discussed dur-commitment is subject to
terested in losing weight. means chairman and co· ing the general me mbership re.vision. H ave alternat ive
Lcttuce-B-TOPS wlll meet at chairman. Their eyes will be meeting included a new methods at hand. Don·t be
HAWAIIAN SHOlllS
Fashion lslaod -Ne..-port Center
Open Sunday 1-5 p.m.
\
'\
i :30 p.m. each Tuesday in Baby feeding turned toward plans for a budget for the coming year, trapped by apparent tradition.
Fountain Valley Elementary repeal fall boutique. programs and ways and Key is to be self-£eliant. !-======================~ School, 17911 Bushard St. The La Leche League of Mrs. James Murar, youth means projects. Mrs . Leo VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):lr
New officers of the group in· Huntington Beach plan11 a · eh airman, will report on pto-Shaw and· Mrs; -K e n n e t h Avoid unnecessary t r a v e 1 .1 elude the Mmes. Lyle Bolton, meeting next Thursday, June gress of the youth employment Heggstrom were in charge of There are responsibilities in l
president; Frank Lewis, vice 26, in the Huntington Beach service now in its sixth year in refreshments. immediate vicinity. Definite
president; Robert A 11 a rd, home of Mrs. Steven Eicherly. the harbor are.a. A float designed n n d gain indicated. But you must
secretary; George Bauer, The discussion which will decorated by club men1bcrs be available to give your best.I
treasurer, and Gene Durst, feature the art of natural and sponsored by the city \\·as LIBRA (Se.pt. 23-0ct. 22 ):
\1·eight recorder. feeding of infants is scheduled Court Stella judged third place winner in Fin ish what you start. Take1
Or. Richard Gray will speak from 9 a.m. until noon., the Garden Grove Stra"•berry nothing for granted. Not wisel
11•hen the club meets at 8 p.m. Further information about M'mbers of Court Stella Festival. to delegate. duties. You coul~I
ANNOUNCING
Crispin "Cris" Torres
July 15. and additional in· the league or advice on Maris 1448, Cat ti o Ii c The trophy Will be presented lose money, unless aware o£1 forn1ation regarding the new natural feeding problems may Daughters of America meet to the city council by r.::!tiring specific duties. Strive to im·
p.uo1 group may be obtained by be obtained by calling ~1rs. each second and fourth Mon-president Mrs. Walter Conners prove techniques. I
cEt.T1 ~1c1iT1. OF 1usiN1.ss ealling i\l rs. Durst. 968-4703, or Robert BouUn. 827-0592 or day at 8,p.m. in St. Joachim's and Mrs. Patrick Skoropada, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): FICTITIOUS N•ME ,.~ 11n<1er1;;nPC1 "°"' t•rmv he 11 con· ~trs. Bolton, 544-8876. Mrs. David Watercotl 847-8059. parish hall, Costa Mesa. prealdent. Strained relationship occupies
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D•vlo 11:. Tic•
l !•lt cl Ctlllornil, 0•11•11t Coun!v·
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lo tl'lt Within ln1lrume<il Ind I Ck"OWlftlt·
td '-e e~ecuttd !'-e '''"'· {OFFICIAL se•L l
Mtrv IC. Henrv Not1.-y Publlc·C1 llfornl1 Prlnclt&I Olllct fn
Ortn<;f Coun!v
Mv Comm lulcn Exolr.,
Nov. :~. 1911
l'ubll!-llt<I Or•n11e Co1i t D1llv Pllol, Junt J, 10, 17, )j. 196' 10S7-69
LEGAL NOTICE I
"IUl'Elt!Olt COUltT OF Tl4£ STAT! 011
CALIFOltNIA I FOlt 1"Nlli COUNTY OF OltANOE
Mt. "°'Ull
NOTtCll!" 0" NE ... ltlND OF PETITION
,(llt PllotATE 011 WILL AND J'Olt
L•n11ts _T•ITAMINTAllY
, Eslllt Of ANNE W!LLIAM5 lllENNAN.
·De«eMd. NOTICE IS HEll:E t'f OIVEN 1"htl
ltM: Ill AITll'kl. N1llon1I Trwt ttod 51'1·
1119• A..otlttlori htl lllld fttrr ln • Hllllon
f or Probllle of will tnd for luu1nc1 cl
Letff<"I 1"n11me<il••V 10 P!!ll+on.,,
rt11rt!'I« It .... 111ai I• m1de fo• !u•lht•
P*rllc\I .. ,,_ Ind ltlll 11'11 lln'lt tnd Pll<t
er( MtrJnt fht u,.,.,. h11 l!Mn •ti 111• Jutr
J, 1Hf, 11 f;)O 1.m., In lt>e courtroom r !
'DllP&rtrn111t No. J fl/ N ld ccurl. 11 7ac
·w"t Elolllll! '''"'' 111 '"' c11, et 51n11
""'' CtUloml1. I O•IM Jl>M I,, IHf I
in CORONA DEL MAR
To~e the for3t b g >'"IP
rewords lo\<n<J 1.t1oht
and keeping it c1! for
good Come 10 1he cne
a ~.d only Weigh t
,Wo1chers•.Mony
, lhoosonds of people
throughout the United
15101e~ ond in other POrts
lof •he ..orid SUCCe $5Funv
!follow our sensible weigh!
control prog1om.
d1e1~-You eo1 rhree1-earry
meoh o doyond 1hen
SO'Tle. and you lo5e
weigh!.
Don't 11'1ss 1h1s c.honce.
l't;»!ro/fo~ SJ 00
""'•ellyduei S2 00
No pills No storvo!ion • il"el'"" "'°i ... .,u,
CLAS/ OPENINGS NOW I
THIS WEDNES DAY, 9:30 1.m. o• 8:00 p.m.
W, E. ST JOHH
, COVnt'/' Cleft •I !ht Comm11nilv Cc~9 r19tt>o"1I Church tlUltWltz. HUltWln AHO 1t•Mllt 4Jt.Jllllll 11""4 611 Hel:of•opt (off Co•1I Hw'yl
~41-:;c~•Wenlt, rlUJ CALL t~l·S505 fer F1tt,rli.r h1ftrmetle1t
Alt«M1a.., '-tlllHlr ASK FO . ,.lllllTMtd Ort11t1 '°''' D1f~ P iiot, R FREE BROCHURE
JIJl'lt 17, 11.. ''' IHf ,. llSM• '---------------------·
' J
IS NOW ASSOelATEO'WITH
DEE'S BEAUTY SALON
703 E. BALBOA -BALBOA
ON THE PENiNSULA
673-sno
SPECIALISTS IN HAIR PIECES
I
I
-• Saddleha~k
~l. 62, NO. 150, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES .. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO RNIA .•
•
Today's Fl•al
. ..... •
•
TUESDAY, JUf.l~ ·24, 1969 TEN CENTS
Laguna Schools Expected ·to Get Budget Hike
A prelinlinary budget of $2 ,726,4511 for
Laguna schools in the coming fiscal yea'r
is up a little more than $200,000 over the
amount budgeted for the current fiscal
period.
The sch.ool board is expeeled to adopt
the budget. at a special meeting Thursday
beginning at 7:30 p.m.
The budget ls subject to change in its
final form .which trustees will adopt in
August. These can inctude changes in the
predicted ($5 million) asses~ed valuation
increase when that figure becomes firm.
lt can also be changed by a number of
different forms of slate monies lhat
figure in budgeting.
It appears on the strength of the
preli1ninary budget, at least, that the tax
picture will be about lhe same as las t
year. for district property owners.
The 196S.70 preliminary !stimate woulrl
require a $2.60 tax rate compared to a
r•te.of $2.51 this year. However, Edward
llind, district business manager, thinks
ace
Dowta the
Mission
Trail
I :Salt Creek Issue
St1tdied by Capo
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -A request
by the Capistrano Bay Park and Recrea·
tion District for su pport in gaining public
access to the Salt Creek beach will be
studied by the San Juan Capistrano City
Council.
Councilmen Monday referred the plea
to the city altorney for an investigation
into current situation. The park district
asked for a support resolution urging the
Orange County Board of Supervisors to
seek means to provide public access to
the ocean property, :e Jaycees Plan 41h
LAKE FOREST -An 0"1d fashioned
Fourth is planned as tne /\1ission Viejo
Jaycees hold their first annual Com-
munity Day Celebration Ju1y 4. at Lake
Forest. Action star1"' :i.t 8:30 a.m. Friday.
On tap are a bicycle derby, an arts and
crafts display, a street dance, baking and
dancing contests and a carnival midway
as well as the traditional fireworks and
beauty contest
e Capo Barbecue OK'd
SA N JUAN CAP ISTRANO -Approval
for a barbecue sponsored by the San Juan
Capistrano Fiesta Association in com·
memoration of ·the California Bicen·
tennial was given ~fonday by San Juan
City councilmen.
The activity will be held July 27 from
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at a location yet to he
determined. said Al Jiminez, "El
Presidente" of the association.
.e Art Worl.shop Set
LAGUNA NIGUEL -Mail registration
for a summer Art Awareness Workshop
for children from nine to 12 years of age
is still open. The workshop run s from Ju·
ly 8 lhrough Aug . 5 and classes mee t
Tuesday at Crown Valley Elementary
School.
\Vorkshop will be taught by Zondra
Knutsen. Fee is $12 .50 per child and in-
cludes Cost of art materials. Registration
and checks may be mailed to the Niguel
Art Association. 29501 Vii>ta Plar.a,
Laguna Niguel. For further information,
call 49a-4622 or 49H262.
.• Perso1111el lllect Set'
CAPISTRANO BEACH -Trus tees of
t~.e Capistrano Unified School District
will meet in a special session Tuesday at
1:30 p.m. to discuss schools' personnel .
Among items for consideration are the
reassignment of Richard Herr as prin-
cipal of Capistrano school and authoriza-
tion of a refund check for $7.400 lo J. D.
Diffenbaugh Co. for construcllon work .
JtJ01·e Aid Needed
Relief ·Reaches
Besieged Camp
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. military
spokesmen reported t o d a y a convoy of
2,000 reinforcements with tons of a~
munition hod battled through encircling
Communist forces to try to lift the siege
of Ben Het where the Green Beret and
SQuth Vietnamese defenders fought off
four ground assaults and killed 153 at·
tackers.
But any relief to Ben Het, a U.S.
Special Forces camp in the central
highlands, \l."as only temporary. North
Vietnamese gilllners in lhe surrounding
hills hit the camp Mo~ay v:ith 199
round~ of .artillery and mortar .fire -the
heaviest of the 4.8-daf sifge.
Communist gunlire S01,1th or Ben flet
shot down a U.S. Air Foret C130 Hercules
transport, kintng the els: men aboard, and
lhen ~hot down an Army UHl rescue
helicopter at the scene, wounding three
men a board.
The U.S. Command also reported two
other aircraft lost in the stepped up
fighting.
\Vhlle Viet Cong units carried out a ntw
terrorist campaign in the J.1ekong Delta
far to the south of Saigon, military
spokesmen reported a new 4,~man
Ameri zan offensive in the Khe Sanh area
-Operation Utah Flat, which began
June J.2 and has killed 161 communists at
a loss of 28 Americans killed and 80
wounded .
U.S. Marines involved in the operation
one mile south of Khe Sanh added to the
toll early today by setting up an ambush
trap outside their base perimeters.
A spokesman said a platoon of Marines
opened flre on Communists they saw
sneaking toward the base, alerting their
colleagues inside. The leathernecks then
retreated back inside the perimeter lo
add their fire)XIV.'er to the battle. The
Communists killed thtte Americans and
~ndetl ll but lost 4.4 dead' ln th~ attack
which railed to breech lhe defenses;
ln the latest rClllld of fighting t Ire
CommUnisll lhelled 15 allied baHI ..i
Vletiiamese towns during the nlgtit.
Casualties were reported negligible, but
the new terrorism in the ~fekong Delta
took a heavier toll. ,.
In the Delta town of Cal Tau, 60 miles
southwest of Saigon, a bomb set on in a
market place Monday killed six civiUans
and wounded 21. A Communist road mine
near coastal Phan Thiel killed two
civilians and wounded (Ive. Five other
civilians were wounded today when Com·
munlsts fired two 840 rocket grenades in-
to a regional forces outpost 22 miles
:south of Saigon.
Autonetics Plant to Pose
W ate1~ Service Problem
North American's Autonetlcs plant in
Laguna Niguel, which will employ about
7.200 persons initially, also means king·
sire demands on water and waste dis-
posa l services.
Carl Kymla , n1a nager of the Moulton·
Niguel Water Di.strict, said that for each
employe about 200 gallons of industrial
\Vaste will be created-about 1,4.40,000
gallons daily.
\Vater demands for the big plant v:ill
be less amounting lo about 25 gallons per
day per employe or about 88,000 gallons
daily.
Kymla said the huge requirements of
the plant will not place a strain on the
capacities of his di.strict, tha( the indus-
Stoel< lllarket•
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock--market
turned in a winning perfonnance today -
a rarity during recent weeks of sharp
decline -with brokers crediting a
technical rally for the advance. (See
quotations, Pages 10.11 ).
trial needs had been foreseen and met.
lndustrial waste created at the North
American facility will have to be treated
to .standards established by the San Diego
\\rater Quality Control Board.
Generally, these standards require that
the waste be about the same consistency
as domestic discharge.
Following treatment by Nonh Amer·
ican, the waste will aga in be treated by
the water district's sewage stations and
\Vil~ • ~e exhausted into inland sewage
fac1ht1es or Into the ocean from the Ali.so Cr~k outfall. ·
The increased amount of matter to be
[reated and disposed of will not tax dis-
trict facilitie! because times of discharge
occur at the times when domestic dlS·
charge is least-during working hours .
To provide water to the Aulonelics
plant, the water district will· cQnstruct a
10 million gallon water reservoir which
\\'ill also · serve parts of Laguna Niguel.
Sti~ki11g Ne~k Out
Guards to Keep
Eyes Open for
Beauty Enb·ies
Will Glue Hold Guillotine?
LONDON (UPI) -~iichacl Booty slak·
td his life today on his company's new
gli1e.
Booty, 27, will pla ce hi s head in a
~illotine in the ~hamber of hoIT0"5 at ~1adame Tussaud s \Vaxworks torught.
The guillotine ha s been altered so thal
ila razor-sharp blade is suspended by a
rope which has been cut and rejoined by
the new glue.
I( the glue holds the blade should end
Its deadly plunge just above Booty'•
nock. If It docs not bold. a .spokesman for
rtlm:lame Tus saud's said the blade will a:o
'
•
-
1hroogh Booty's nttk "like a butcher'•
knife going through a piece of steak."
The household glue Is called "Power
Pack" and its manulacturen:, Borden
Chemicals Ltd .• claim It is the "strongest
glue in the world."
"Our engineers say It jg 99.9 percent
certain the glue will hold ," Booty said
bravely. "Believe me, if I wasn't con-
Udenl, J wouldn't be doing It."
Booty's w i f e Susanne, 26, said sh e
pre(ers not to watch and will remain
home with thth-7-month-old daughter.
His flnn said they have imured his lire
for 100,000 pounds ($21111,000).
"
. .
Laguna Beach lifeguards may develop
a unique annual occupational hazard dur·
ing the next 10 day3 -prior to tbe July 4
Llfeguard Beauty Queen Contest.
The malady or fringe benefit involves
sU{f ·neck end eyestrain, since con-
tesla!"lts to be judged during the
Independence Day weekend must be
nominated by the stalwart supervisors of
surf and sand.
Announcement of the winner will come
at 7 p.m., followiJli ceremonies •I the
Main Beach Lifeguard tower, according
to Lifeguard t .. t. Eugene De-Pauhs; •
Judges for the annual JuJt 'e\'t11~have
not yet been chosen, he a:pl:alned, tfttt. ad·
ded he lan'l worried since .the field of .
volunteer• ls always larae. ~
the present bond interest and rMemption
rate of 46 ctnls may drop a few peMies.
This will probably amount to a few ~nts
increase for the district taxpayer.
Hind said the preliminary buC:get also
wiU eat inlo district reserves about
$2S)l00.
A blg question mark will be salary in·
creaslls for teachers and classified
personnel. About five or six percent in in·
creases has been calculated but this
could change pending outcome of negotia·
lions with the school board.
The budget estimate shows $1 ,286,000
expended for classroom t e a c h e r s '
salaries this year and $1,415,732 figured
ror next, an increase of $129,732.
:CdM'S •DEBBIE SHANNON., IS, 1BECOME5 GOLD MEDAL
Dana Poin1:1 Mar.y Z•v•la.,, ~ •. Applies Makeu~·
: . DAI( Y 'II.OT ,...,.. '' I.II ''""'
FINISHED PRODUCT SPOTLIGHTED 'ON PAGEANT STAGE
In LfYing Color, A Replic1 of Olympic Gold
.
l)ealer's Sound Moved
' Theft of a $140 portable lelevision and
aboot $25 ei:sh was disoo\/ered this moni·.
ing at a rLaguJia Beach car de.aler's 0£-
llce.
Raft at Halfway Mark
MIAMI ' (UPI) -Thor Hcyonlahl
TcacJ;ed the halfway mark lodtty in hi$
1~1c.~r~l2&.ion l}l.c .p~py~ raft ~a,
a iTcilfl,. alto' niaFki!lg ...,.pi.uon Qt °'Jt
thlnt QI hl3 v0111<'\& llw Ylkatan.cout
ol )>IWco. . : . • . . •
, t, '
Police ·said tl!e burglar· bl-olce a door
pane to enter offices at Barwick Datsun,
998 s.") Co8tit ffighWay", wHere he prleCI
open Cablnets ·and tOOk the:oa$h box.
In 'nother burglary, Otis N. Kirkland, 404 O«an1 Ave .. , apartment 3 told police a
S15' power lawn mo~er ha,d been solen
from' his rooms by a pack.:rat thief who
left an empty beer can. ·
Alex F. Hllkevlt.Ch. 955 S. Coast
Highway, reported the $120 tl~ft of 1
surfboard and bicycle from 1 garage at
tl8·Gavtot1 Drive.
.. C"art 'Ar Thelin .. 250 Beverly' St.,, sald iWo ffoWef Pots With· ir1Ulc1al flowers
stolen from bis yai\I were worth l!IJ. .,
Prlnci(l&ls' uleries would be up about
$10,000 from $126,300 expended to $l36,t.s7
budgeted.
Hind said the budget ls based on a $5
million assessed valuation increase
cak:ulatlon. A cheek with the county
assessor, he said, indicated this should
generally be in the ball park but it could
be more or less.
Press Gets
Preview of
'Living Art'
By RICHARD P. NALL
Ot '"* D•UJ Pl .. I S"ff
The. wink .of flash bulbs and the purr of
Orne exposures Monday night heralded
the 34th coming of Laguna's first laily -
the Pageant of the Masters.
Arffi.s akimbo with photograph I c
paraphernalia, the working pre: s s
clustered close to the source of the magic
in woodsy Irvine Bowl. ·
Their light m~ers measured lhe ~
tensi.ty of Illusions,, art fn;im the 'ges
recreated in life si:ie.
For the public; the &ix weeks o( "living ·
picture!" begin July ll and end Aug. 24.
Preview night is July 10 when the fully-
progremmcd first performance raises its
clirtaina on 26 .subjects.
Pageant Proi:Juce'f Don Willia.msoft
Monday night un veiled six of his llluaions
to·ttle eye,pl Ult. canwn·a. They.ran&! J)Ot,.
only OlmJi!h Umi bul um year tvon lake
on space.
As America's aslronauls land on the
moon in July, the Pageant will have its
counterpart, "The Longe.st Step"' painted
by Norman Rockwell.
One of the astronauts depicted, John
Y,owig. recenUy made space history in
lbe close lunar orbit. •
The painting was technically difficult. to
create because of its tremendoUs amount
of di!tail, gauges, instrumentation, tubes
.and, wiring. It depicts two ast"rooauts
6uiting up.
Given body by an orchestra and the
narration of Hap Graham also draws
strength from ·us programming as Joca·
tion.•i"are shlfied ffom me main stage to
the 50 foot upi)er stage to the woodsy ,
hillside.
One of the works presented by
Wllliamso'n was part of a c1·eation show·
irig both the Pink Period and the Blue
Period in the artistic life of Pablo
Picasso.
''The Disposiessed" will be shown be·
(Sfe PAGEANT, Page Z)
LUCKY READERS
SEE SJ/OW FREE
Everyone loves to see a good fireworks
show on the Fourth of July, but not
everyone getll to see one for free.
Some DAILY PILOT readers are going
to luck out this week and get Cree passes
to the July 4th show at Anaheim Stadium.
Theri! is no obligation on your Part. '
The lucky readers will find their names
scattered throughout the classified sec-
tion this week.
Better have a look right now.
Orange
Weather
The sun may poke his· sleepy
head through the clouds for a bit
~<>;~:r c:Stw:r:!a~c~~::tur~;
in the lower 70's.
INSIDE TODAY
Sen. Jolut Schmitz' st.z class
control legi&lation, whicli lets
parents decide if their 11ouna·
s~rr 1t'flt take the course. has
passed cruicial h1trdlc. Set Story
Page 3.
C•N"""'• ' _,,,, u
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0.111 Netktf IO .._._ • 111"'1.t ..... • IMl91 ..... ••1• .. _ • .... "·If ·-· 1•11 SIKtt MM!lh 1•11 ••r1 Ch•tli•r .. ft""'9ltfl " -" -•n • A1111 w•m .. Wt•ltltr • .. -• ·--.. ----.. Lkt11Mi 11
• •
'
I ~ ' .,. • • • • • . ~ ·-. _...__, ___ ----------· ......... ~ -----·
IN LINE FOR PROMOTION -Junior Guard in·
structor Dale Ghere (right) puts representatives of
Laguna Beach Lifeguard Department's three-.phase
farm .system for future lifeguards through their
OAllY PILOT Stiff Plllte
paces. Boys (from left) are Sea Cub Victor Frisbi~,
9; Junior Guard Jerry Chilvers, 13, and Rook1e
Guard Digger Ware, 16.
Sea Cub Best Lifeguard
Senior Guard Picks Program Grad Over All-America1i
By TOM GORMAN
Of 'ttit O.lly Piiot Steff
"] fed that a boy who ha.s progressed
through the lifeguard program starting
with Sea Cubs makes a better lifeguard
than an All-American swimmer from
UCLA who come5 out on the biach for
the first time."
Thus spoke Denys O. "Jake" Jacobsen.
senior supervisor for the Laguna ~ach
Lifeguard Department. He's seen a lot of
Jlfeguards -and rescues -over the
years at the Main Beach lifeguan:I head-
quarters.
Jt was estimated from that tower that
there have been over 100 rescues in the
past 10 years in which the department's
Sea Cubs or Junior Guards assisted. In
some instances, a Sea Cub or Junior
Guard Jllade rescues single-handed.
One case that stands out most in the
nine~year history of the Sea Cub pro-
gram, involving boys eight through 12,
was when a youngs ter saw a man in trou-
ble In rough surf off a South Laguna
beach. The boy grabbed his air mat and
.saved the man while a crowd of
beachgoers watched from land.,
A present participant in the lifeguard
program, high e:cbool senior Earl
Wellsfry, hes made three unassisted
rescues during his association with the
force. up to this year.
The lifeguard program is advantageous
to both the young beachgoers and the
department. When a youngster enters the
Sea Cubs at age 8, he will be instructed
on land and in water on water safety and
hazards.
By the time he is graduled from the
program, at age 12, he \\'ill be a
reasonably good swimmer, and will have
had experience in first aid. In the junior
guard programs, ages 13 through 16, the
boy will tiave increased training in en-
durance swimming.
At this stage in the game, the boys
become active in high school in-
terscholastic waler polo and swimming.
A great many of the school's swimming
records are held by past and present
Junior Guards.
Just last year, the city allowed the
lifeguard department lo hire boys under
18 years of age to be "rookie guards.''
"\Vhere else can a person get a job at $2
an hour, 20 hours a week, sitting on the
beach?" asked Junior Guard instructor
Dale Ghere.
The rookle guards are stationed at the
three stands along Main Beach. This
year, there are eight boys in this stage.
OAllY PILO!
By the time a boy graduates into the
regular program,at 18 years ot age, he
has had 10 years experience with
Laguna's beaches.
'.'We feel they are superior by that
point," Ghere said. "They're better
guanh than someone coming in from out
or town because they know the town, the
hazards ol the diUerent beaches1 and our
unique operating procedure.
"And atter working with them for t'n
years, we know just what they~~ cap!ble
o!," Ghere added. "They've had ten
year& of lessons on how to become a
lifeguard."
This year's rookies include Bill Brown,
Mike Contino, John Enfield, Jeff Quam,
John Slowsky, Dirk Van Deulen, Olarlle
and Digger Ware, and Earl Wellesfry. All
but Contino and Digger Ware haVe been
in the complete eight year program -to
become the first "graduating class" of
the lifeguard program, frotn Sea Cubs
through Rookie Guard.
"And there are so many kids who were
in the program at one time, who are now
surfers at our local beaches. They make
rescues that we seldom hut about -
they're sort of the unsung heroes of
Laguna Beach," Ghere said.
The program Is on the grow. Last year
there were 35 junior guards. This year
there is an expected turnout of 50. About
300 Sea Cubs have graduated into the
Junior Guard category over the yars,
Ghere estimated.
"This program is unique to our beach.
There i!n't one other department along
the California coast that can bout of a
proil'am like ours," Ghere e:aid.
Laauna Beach Lifeguards believe they
have a good thing going.
Capo Rejects Rail Line _
To s·and Deposit in Viejo
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
~1onday denied permission ror the con·
struction of a r ailroad spur line through
the city lo the Mission Viejo Ranch site
of a silica sand deposit.
The council cited noise and" danger to
city residents as one reason for the re·
jection and noted that the spur line would
mean nothing in itself for the city.
"As Jong as the people of San Juan
Capistrano gain no benefit (from the
railroad line), I would be opposed to it,"
Mayor Edward Chermak said.
The line to be built by Owens·Illinois,
would have hauled the silica sand used
for making glass from the mining site
south of the Ortega Highway to east of
San Juan Creek bridge to a siding at the
Sante Fe mail line along the south side of
'Heritage Trees'
Protection Due
A proposed law to protect Laguna's
"heritage trees" from the ax is likely to
surface at some August City Council
session.
the San Juan Flood Control Channel.
The council was told that in lieu of rail
shipment, some 33 truck trips would be
made daily from the sand deposit lo the
siding. Another 33 trucks would be used
dally regardless of the spur, Owens·
Illinois representative S. J. Blair said.
It is estimated that about 450,000 tons
of sand will be mined from the site in the
first year and that lhis would increase
eventually to 540,000 tons per year. A 40-
year supply of sand is said to be at the
deposit.
B:lair was praised by Mayor Chermak
for his work with the city in investigating
,the spur line.
-In other action Monday, the city coun·
cil:
-Approved for purchase a $60,000 2.5
acre park site in the San Juan Hills
development area near Via Madonna
street. The property has been appraised
at $91 ,000 and is owned by Kolbet of
Newport Beach.
-Approved a merit salary increase for
Harold A1bert, city finance director, from
$940 to $992 a month.
-Approved the attendance or Ernest
Thompson, city administrator, at the
Solid Wute Management Institute in San
Francisco Thursday.
-Delayed consideration of the city's
$1.4 million budget until June 30 special
meeting.
Fron• Page l
PAGEANT. ••
side Picasso's "The Tragedy'' from his
blue period.
Another that UJ sure to be a crowd
pleaser is the Pageant creation of "The
Rocket Thrower" a work that stood 45-
feet high at the New York World's Fair
of 1964--65.
In a difficult pose, Robert :fttock of
f\-1anhatlan beach is stopped in motion as
he bunches his muscles to hurl the
missile skyward.
"Children By The Sea" shows the
warm colors and light of American im·
pressionlst Edward Henry Potthast in a
typical American beach scene.
Frederic Remington's "The Smoke
Signal" is sharp in detail and. color con·
trasts, a scene of Ameltcan Ihdians.
One of the most vivid contrasts un·
veiled by Williamson was the old and the
new Olympic Awards. It is two subjects.
One a modern Gold Medal like the one
won by Lagunan Bill Toomey in the 1968
decathlon in Mexico City.
The oiher award is a decorative vase of
the type given winners of the original
games held every four years at the plain
of Olympia in Elis, Greece.
The 26 subjects in thls yea r"s Pageant
'viii be about 80 percent new with three
favorites fiom last year repeated and,' of
course, the traditional closing repeat,
da Vinci"s "Lan' Supper."
Santa Ana Man Dies
In Vietna1n Action
Navy Photographer's Mate lC Robert
G. St rickland of Santa Ana, died in Viet-
nam action, the U.S. Defense Department
announced Monday.
The husband of :ftfrs. Constance E.
Strickland, 3512 W. Chestnut St..
Strickland was one of 116 American
servicemen killed in action recently •.
Scientist Snccuuths
NEW YORK (UP I) -Rocket scientist
\Vi llie Ley, an adviser on this country's
Apollo space program, collapsed and died
in his home Tue.sdjy. He was 62 years
old.
OltAMG~ COJ.ll PYllllHIHO COM,.,,N't
ltoMrt ff, W1N
t'mllltn! .,.. Mlblllr
Councilman Roy Holm broached the
matter to fellow councilmen wec:nesday.
l\lentioning Laguna's large number of
unusual and beautiful trees, he submitted
a copy of San Mateo 's tree-conservation
ordinance.
Tax Rate to Drop
J1tli: R. C111lrf
Capo Airport Operating
While Struggle Goes On
Capistrano Airport, Orange County's
''orphan" Oylng field in the South Orange
Coast area, is back on a month-to-month
operating basis this week while county of·
ficials, San J\lan Capistrano city ex-
ecutives and the airport's operators
struggle to reach an agreement.
That struggle that has been going on
for the past four years.
At issue is 5.44 acres or C1>unty Oood
control district property which is used as
the south half of the airport runway.
Operators Bruce Winton and Julian
Willcox have been negotiating with the
county for two years over this "key
acreage •
:Qut the operators claim they carutot af-
ford to buy the land at the $76,000 value
placed on it by county Real Property
Services Director Stanley Krause.
RENT lllKED
The 5.44 acres hare been lea sed to the
airport owners for the past three years at
$fl0 a . month by the Flood Control
District. That renta l has now been peg·
ged at $150 a month until the hassle is
settled.
In the meantime, the city of San J uan
Capistrano has gotten into the act with a
proposal to buy the disputed acreage
from the county and lease it to the
airport.
But the fly in the ointment is the city's
proposal that a new appraisal of the land
be made and that the city purchase it at
half that appraisal on a no·interest con-
tract over 15 years.
The city agrees that when the property
Is no longer used for an airport - a
distinct possibility in a few years because
or urban growth -it will pay off the 50
percent balance at the appraised price in
1969.
SUPERVISORS BALK
County supervisors balked at this idea,
stating that the balance should be paid
off, if and when. at the appraised market
value at that time. They said that 6V1
percent interest should be paid _pn the "60
percent purchase price, also.
The San Juan proposal came to a vote
last Wednesday and the count was 3 to 2
for the deal as outlined by the
supervisors. However, a four-fifths vole
is required on the sale of county propertt .
and the motion was lmt.
TWO OPPOSED
Opposing were supervisors David L.
Baker and Robert W. Battin. Baker call~
ed the proposal deal "subterfuge in its
ra\.\.·est fonn. We would be laying
ourselves, the city and the operators opeb
to a Grand Jury investigation.
"The city wants to buy the land with no
down payment and no i n t e r e s t
payments,'' Baker continued. ''The city i~
not investing a dollar and plans to least;
to a private party who will reap the
benefit."
1 The board voted unanimously to con'.-
tinue the month·t.o-month lease at the
new $150 a month rental.
"Tell me, what do we do now,'' asked
\Vinton, when the votes were completed.
He dldri 't get art answer and there was no
determinatio.n as to when an answer wip .
be forthcoming. It has taken four ye31
to get this far.
Child Neglect
Against Laguna
Sitter Dropped
• I
A felony child neglect charge against a
Laguna Beach babysitter has been
dismissed in municipa l court and a teMer
misdemeanor charge is to be filed . "
Ruth Louise DunLavey, 52, of 790 N.,
Coast Highway, has pleaded innocent to
the lesser charge. A jury trial has beeo
scheduled in municipal court for J uly 29.
She is free on her own recognizance
and is represented by the public
defender.
Mrs. DunLavey wa s arrested br
Laguna Beach police officers on the wed-·
ding day of the 20-month-old boy 's
mother, Carolyn Howe, and Laguna
Detective Gene Brooks.
Police went to the DunLavey residence
May 13 after a report that the little boy ·
had been kidnaped, officers said. \Vith a
neighbor's help, they said they found the
child outside \\'here he h~d tumbled down
:i. brushy slope between two houses.
'1ct ,,.ltellt Mil 0-M ~
Tho11111 Kff'fil ....
Tlro11111 /.. Mwr,lii"'
Miftff!/11 l•ltet
It prohibits removal of heritage trees in
the city with uceptions such as public
safety or interference with franchised
public utilitiu. With exceptions, a per·
mit is needed to remove a heritage tree
in San Mateo.
Saddlehack Cuts · Budget Pendleton Brig
• Brawl Hurts 26 l l1l.1rd r. Nill
L-OH<ll (~ ~-1-
........... onke
222 , ••••• AYI.
M1llT~1 M4••H1 r.o. ••• "'· 92•1z ...... _
(nit Mai: AO '0¥tll ,.,. SI,_. N..,...... ... (11: n11 wn1 .. ""• IO'•lt¥tN tl ......... IOll llMUI: 1Dt Stll $1rl'lt
-2"'7 ,, ..
OA•LY PILOI wlftl 4!'Plldl • c~ '"' ........ ~ • ..,1111....., .. Irv t~l."1 &.,.. lfllY lo! _,,_ •tt•t .... 1-... d'i.
..... lfMC:lt 1!'M. '*"""" IM(.f\. CM" ~ H\llllliatM le.ell .,,.. .. _,."" \Ill· ..... °''* Cftll l"WlllJlllll Cetl"lflfflt
Sll'll'lllllf '"""'' ,,.. 11 '111 WWI ltlb09 IMI,, N..,wl llldl,, Mt »J W.1 .. , ""'91, CO.Ill M.... , '
, ......
9 17141 .......... , a.•--..... '42"4JJt
~ 1-. Or..,.. tted Pu~llhMI
:....... .... -,...... ""'""""""' ~ -lilt ... .....n ..... ia ..... ~ _, • ~.. wlllloul -let .. ,. ......... ~--·
- -.. ~. ,, ,.._. tlltflo -Cll*ll. ,._, t tto, MK•.....,. •• .,,.. .... ~ , "' _ .. It.JI ....,.,.,
tlllM'f ......, ..... UM m111tlfll~.
A heritage tree is defined as one with
historical significance or that has taken
on an aura of historical appeal. It refers
to types trees and sizes beginning with
trtts of SO-inch trunk circum(erence.
P e11dleton Base
'Bell Call' Ends
Operalion 1'Btll Call" at Camp
Pt!ndleton r.1arlne Ba!e \\.'as expected to
end this afternoon.
The attack began last week "''hen the
largest amphibious training exerclse on
the West Coast since 1987 got under way.
The 13th ~1arine Expeditionary Brtaadc
and 5th Marine Division were supJ)Orted
by planes of the 3rd Marine Aircraft
\Ying when they landed on Whlle Beach
!or the start of the mock battle Friday.
Comma ndant or the fo.tarlnc Corps.
General Leonard F. Chapman wa.s on
hand fOr the opening maneuvers.
A majority of Saddleback College
trustees Monday night voted to cut sharp-
ly reserves in next year's budget to keep
the tax rate down.
Boarrl members Michael Collins, Hans
Vogel and Patrick Backus balloted to
reduce reserves from 14 percent of this
year's budget to an estimated three per·
cent next year.
Lou Zitnik voted no and Alyn Brannon
abstained.
Lowering the reserves and leaving in·
t.act other prellmlnary budget requests
,..,ill allow the tax rate for next year to be
S3 cents. down from 71 cents per $100 of
assessed va luation thie past school year.
The taic: rate is to be made up of 40
cents for current expenses and 13 cents
for long·term redemption of building
bonds, both at the .snme level as this
year. An additional 18 cents this year
paid exp1:nses to nelghborlni junior col·
lcge districts for ltudents educated in
lll6H3 .
Saddleback area sophomores ln 1968-&9
attended M:ighboring i u n i o r .college
\
districts fret to local taxpayers because
of a tu exemption for new districts just
gelling off the ground.
Next fall both freshmen a n t.I
sophomores will attend Saddleback.
The battle of the reserves having been
won by the three most politlcally-con-
servative trustees, the current expenses
budget for next school year will be sub-
mitted in prellminary from to the County
Schools Office In the amount of fl,$
ml Ilion.
This year the total was $1.8 million to
take care of needs of 900 students. Next
yur It is eslim•ttd enrollment will be
about 1,600. ,
Uslng those figures, money spent per
studtnt will be red\lctd from $1,666 this
past year to $1,SSO next year.
The board &1$0 approved submission of
a separate $8.4 million building bud&et
for the year.
Saddleback111 Busln,.ss Manaaer Roy
Barle'tta uld r\strve funds •rt used for
two purposes.
The (lrst Is conllngency money to fall
back on In case of emergency. The 14
percent reserves this yeer were not cut
into at all for contingencies.
The second purpose is to have ready
cash available for current operaling ex·
pel'\Ms. Tax money does not come in yea r
around, but salaries and bills must be
paid from monUi to month.
"Like any business a school district
must have working capital," Barletta
said. "You wouldn't wait unut you col·
lected a bill to pay your obligation."
With reserves at a low three percent
le~·el it will be necessary for Saddleback
College lo borrow money from a bank,
paying Inter.est on tt. to tide the district
over, Barletta said.
Most all Bthool districts must borrow
at some lime during the year, but the
reserve level detennines how much they
must borrow and Interest pay.
The three pertent reserves may be
built back higher if final 11ssessed valua·
lion figures In mid July show more IAX"
base than-now estimated. If so. trustees
said they would put tht addiUonal in lhe
reserve fund.
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -One·
guard and 25 prisoners were treated frif ·
injuries after a brawl Sunday nigttt
between inmates at the Camp Pendleto11-i
f\1arine Base brig, officials reported Mort,'
day. . \
The guard and one prison«!r required
hospitalir.afion, but names of the f\1atines
involved were not released.
The fight was between white and NegrO
prisoners in a C1>mpound used by 250 in·-
1natcs, officials said. Not all of the in·
mates took part and there was no al·
tempt to break out , they &aid .
Blacks, Police Clash
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -Al leut
eighl persons were arrested and fi\tt
others injured Monday night ln a rock-
lhrowJng confrontation between about 109
Negroes and policemen.
Almost 100 patrolmen and state~
pal!ctrn.en moved Into this capitol cuy·t·
11111 section after the disturbances broke
out. '' '
Newport Barbor •
Today's Fhaal
N.Y •. Steeb
YclL 62, N0 .1150, 2 SECTIONS, 24 ~AGES ORAN GE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
·,
Newport Bridget Adopted
City Manager Suggests Addition of Utility Tax
DAILY ,lj,,OT Ili ff ,11111
Old 'Bridge Torn Dotvn
Forty-year-old 38th Street Bridge to Newport Island has fallen victim
to wrecking crew. Old bridge is being replaced by temporary Marcus
Avenue span until $124,302 replacement project is completed in
September.
Teacher-student Ratio
Decision Up To .. Trustees
Ncwport-~1csa school trustees tonight
\1 ill decide whether to add 9/looths of a
student per teacher .
Tha t is the point budget deliberatons
arc no1v down to.
V!1hat sounds like the height of
ridiculousness is the result of a budget
practice called staffing r atios. Here is
how it works:
Each school is al\olted staf'f -regular
teachers . ·specialists, pr i n c i pa I,
secretaries, parent or college student
assistants -according to the number of
pupils attending the school.
In the case of high schools, the board is
now considering increasing the staffing
ratio from one full·lime person per 19.16
students to one per 19.25 students. or course there are no 9/IOOths
students: numbers are rounded off. But
there are one-half staff persons such as a
parttime secretary -· even one·th ird
persons like music teachers who divide
lime between three schools.
The arrangement gives schools flex-
ibility to work out their own program on
Finance Director
Bill Opposed
By Grand Jw·y
the premise that student needs are dif-
ferent in different parts of lhe school
district.
Also proposed tonight is an increase in
the intermediate school staffing ratio
from one to 21 upward to one to 211,•
students.
Thal plus a cent and a half tax increase
over the previously contemplated tax
hlke would about offset the proposed
budget deficit of $104,000.
Santa Ana Gets
Facelifting Job
Downtown Santa Ana will gel a facelif-
ting later this year in a "beautification''
move sponsored by the Santa Ana City
Center Association.
Burt Smith of the association said 63
percent of the property owners concerned
are supporting the move which will raise
money to install decoralive sidewalks,
modern street lighting, tree~ and
landscaping along 4th Street between
Ross and Spurgeon streets, a six·block
area.
A one-time levy of $100 a front foot will
pa y for the improvement \vhich may be
completed by Janua ry 1970, Smith sa id.
The city counci l ha s approved angle
pdrking in the area and parking meters
have bee n removed for a six month trial
period in an effort lo stimulate business,
as requested by the association.
y JOHN VALTERZA
01 l~t Dt!llY 1'1111 11•11
Obviously pleased at being able lo ketp
the tax rate the same as last yea r's,
Newport Councilmen Monday unanin.vus-
Jy approved a record preliminary city
budget of $10,864,405.
But a hitch might develop in the taic
rate later this year.
Under the approved budget the tax rate
is expected to hold at $1.225 cents per
$100 of assessed valualion.
Oil Liability
Measure Dies
In Com1nittee
SAC RAMENTO (UPI) -The senate
governmental efficiency committee today
killed Assembly Democratic leader Jesse
~t Unruh's bill to hold petroleum com·
panics strictly liable for damage caused
by oil spills.
The measure was defeated on a split
voice vote. The committee had hejd a
lengthy public hearing on the bill June 3
and postponed action.
Unruh, a potential candidate for
governor next year, promptly assailed
Gov. Ronald Reagan for failing to assist
him. in gaining committee approval.
''I have to conclude that the governor
Is opposed to this measure, despite what
he savs." Unruh tolu newsmen arter the
comrriittee action. "His s i I enc e
represents where he stands on this
issue."
Unruh introduced the hill shortly after
lhe massive runaway oil s~page in the
Santa Bltrbar1l Ch8nnel that washed
ashore and gummed miles of Southern
California beaches.
The bill would have made the oil com·
panies pay for any damages regardless of
what c~used the leaks. The only ex-
emption from liability would have been if
a boa t struck a ~'eU.
Unruh said he was "very upset and
"isturbed" by the defeat or this measu re.
I-le said the legisla\ure was "negligent in
not acting to put this into law."
Unruh said he "sensed" that the bill
had run into trouble in the commitlee and
had hoped Reagan could have assisted in
celling it "out of this Republican-
tlominated committee."
He said the defeat of the bill ind icated
the legislature's "acquiescing to the
power that the special interest lobbyists
have here."
"I don 't think it was killed on ii!:
merit," he adtled.
Albert Shults, an influential lobbyist for
eight oil companies, had questioned the
hill's constitutionality during the hearing.
He challenged whether the state could in-
voke its will on oil operators drilling on
the continenta l shel f thr~ miles off the
California coa st in federal waters.
Slock ltlarkets
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
turned in a winning performance today -
a rarity during recent weeks of sharp
decline -with brokers crediting a
technical rally for the advance. (See
quota tions, Pages 10·11 ).
Trading was fairly active near the
close. The Dow Jones industrial average
of 1:30 p.m. was up 5.30 at 876.16.
The document's approval, however,
was preceded by proposals from city
aides that the council s~dy U}e chance of
imposing a uUUty tax perhaps starting
J uly I. ·
The ustr tax would take, the forni of a
levy on the amount of utility servlC'e.'
The utility lax,. being us'ed In a dozen
California cities at weseot,. was praised
by City Manager Harvey·Hurlburt as an
easily administere«t tax which could raise
an estimated $431,200, a yfar based on an
average rate of $8 per capita."
Hurlburt •aid that th~ money which
could be raised through the tax on utility
use would go into the capital im·
provemenlll portion of the budget.
Whether it would also generate a ta:it
cut on property tuts, however, has not
been d<cldetl.
Ordinances from 1everal cities which
have successfully used lhe levy ire
forthcoming, Hurlburt told the council
The idea will &et further council study
* * tr Denied by Council
Insurance Firms
Lose Bid Appeal
Angered becauae the city did not put a
new $200,000 Insurance program out to
bid, three insurance agent! and other
critics Monday lost a last-minute appeal
to the City Council for a chance to submit
their offers.
·The council, while agreeing to examine
clO!lely any changes in emp\oye health
plans next rear, voted unanimously to
approve· the city's $10.8 million budget
with'the insurance program intact.
The simmering conflict over the In-
surance issue came to a boil when former
councilman Dee Cook of Corona del Mar
cited competitive bidding live.year! ago ·
"'hen the previous health plan was
adopted.
''The council appointed a totally· ln-
dependent consultant and we acted on bis
advice. He ·a:ave us.a choice," he said.
1-fe took exception to hefty benefitt
scheduled for city employet who atte.r
J uly I will receive pregnancy and dental
benefit.R for themsel ves and their depen-
dants, with the city paying the insurance
costs.
''Ask yourselves il your constiluents -
the people you represent -WouJd agree
to this plan. It would be defeated," Cook,
a steady council critic, said .
He and the agents charged it was un-
fair to rely on consultation with the city's
insurance broker<0nsultant R l c h a r d
Keltner Oil the amended plan.
Cook sald he heard that · Keltner con-
tacted five dillerent firms for informal
bids. .
!'I asked to see these bids and wu told
by; the persorplel ofilce that they didn't
have them ."
City Manager Har\1!Y L. Hurlburt
replied, "I'd rather not debate this thing.
This packqe was review~ ~ay 19 and
was highly publkiie<I .. (Cook hod 1rauet1
thal lbe. pion ~u eumlnod by tllo •city
without 1mple public notkt:).''
Hurlburt later added ~at he wu
"shocked" to hear that Cook had betn
told , .tht bid quotatlonl" · were not
av.ailaJ:ile. 1 ,
Cook's api)eararic.e was followed by in-
surance. 1gent Dick H.i1gard, who 1aid
(See INSURANCE, Page I)
Marines, City .to .Meet
On Copters Over Beach
Marine Corps brass and city aides will
meet in Newport Beach Wednesday in an
attemPt to kl!t!p military helicopters· from
hovering over the city's beaches.
The ffieeting was precipitated by an 18-
County W 01uan Dies,
Spouse Hu1·t in Crash
EL CENTRO (AP) -A Santa Ana
woman was klllecl and her husband
criticaily injured Monday y,·hen their car
collided with a cantaloupe truck at
Routes 80 and 111 near El Centro.
Dead is Mrs. Glenda Moreno, whose
husband, John, 51, was taken to El C'A!ntro
Community Hospital. The truck driver
was reported in satisfactory condition.
' poUnd clrgo hajch fallin& frOm a Marine
reSe""e ' chopper onto the. be1ch June 19
a11d by cqnst:ant crltlclsrp by :Vice ~ayor
Undsley Parsons· and residents over the
noise made by the training fllght1 .
The flights, mollly from the Marine
Corps Santa Ana facility and the Los
Alamitoa Naval Air Station, follow routes
set by the Federal Avia tion
Administration, military 3poke1men say.
"But T heard from some Marine
sources that one reason the craft Oy near
the coastline is that in cases of emer-
gency they can ditch in the ocean," Par·
sons said.
He added· ~h;i.t', perhaps due to the
hatch Incident, flights over Newport
beaches this past weekend "dropped
notice&hly~"
The · cargo hitch fell from a Los
Alamlto&-based choP,per., It fell on the
beach .near 19th Street on a weekend day
, wti.en unfavorable weather'kept the beach
crtiwd.11 at a minimum .
A Senate bill which, Jf approved, would
empower county supervisors of many
California counties to appoint a director
of finance got the thumbs down sign to-
day from the Orange County Grand Jury.
County legislators are being urged by
the investigative panel to vote "no" on
Senate Bill 646. They are informed by th~
jury that creation of such an office would
lum over the powers of the auditor·con·
troller, tax collector and treasurer -all
elected officials -to an offictr "directly
responsible to the boar d and the county
execuli\'e.''
Annex Flap Flares Again
But had the · we1thet" been better,
Parsons said, many more. people would
have betn on the Banda where the met.al
door fell, i.'lCreasi~g tbe danier· of injury.
Passage of lhe bill "would mean that
independent elected ~fficials, . ~harged
lvith the duty of collect1ng. retaining and
disbursing county funds, would be replac-
ed by arr appointed officer who would be
directly responsible to the county ad ·
1ninistration rather than to the people,·•
the Grand Jury says.
Legislators arc urged to remember
that "the offices or auditor-controller, tax
collector and treasurer are an in·
dispensable part of the system of checks
~nd balances necess ary to g.JOd govern·
1nent." "It is essential," the Gt And Jury
claims. ''that the holders of these posi-
tions be independent from the ad·
ministrAtion in the performance of their
duties."
Marines Hospitalized
SAN plEOO !UPI) -Two Marine
recruits 11tationed at the Marine Corps
Recruiting Depot In San Diego have been
hospltallted with menina:ococeat men·
ingtli~, a Marine ~pokcs1nan here rrports.
Mesa, Neivport Pursuing Conflicting Land Requests
Just one week after announcement of a
tentative boundary agreement, Costa
~1esa and Newport Beach officials are
about to go before county authorities
again with ironically confl icting an-
nexation requests.
The Local Agency Formation Com-
mission (LAFC) will listen to arguments
in behalf of three annexation plans at its
2 p.m. meeting \Vednesday in Santa Ana.
Talks between cooncilmanlc boundary
c::immiUees from Newport Beach and
Cosla Mesa -advised by LAFC ex-
ecutive offft!t!r Rtt:tr.u'tl Turner -·seem-
ingly hammered out mutual agreement,
but it was rejected June 16 by Newport
cily oUlcials.
Now, on tbe eve of a decision. the
LAFC is advised by Turner to approve
the Costa Mesa Back Bay .Vlnexation No.
I, and either disapprove, o: ask Newport
Beach to withdraw and chang<. its own.
nasically, the confiict centers on
Tumer'lll suggestion that Tustin Avenue
-the traditional boundary line betwten
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa -re.-
main ~:i.·
, I
Leaders of both cities agreed to this in
lhoory at their respective June 16 city
council meetings. but Newport Beach
leaders then voted to continue their own
annexation attempts.
The conflicting annexation proposals
raced with the problem of overlapping
are the Costa Mesa Back Bay No. 1, a ~
acre parcel between Tustin and Santa
Ana avenues, north of La Canada Way
and north and 50Uth of Mesa Drive, which
bisects U.
Newport Beach's La Canada annex. 23,
acres west o( Tustin Avenue between
Orchard Drive on the north and 660 feet
wuth o( Unlvers,ity Drive overla ps the
Cost.a Mesa proposal on its eastern half.
The third annexation proposal is
Newport Beach's West Santa Ana Heights
bid, an 89-acre section between Palisades
Road on the north and Orchard and Mesa
drives on the sou th, Santa Ana Avenue on
the wes t and a point wrst of Acacia
Strtct on the east. ,
This wa11 originally 116 acret, but ipro-
lesting resident!: led Newport Beach.of·
flclats 10 sha\•e off 27 acrts on the
eastern half of the annexation package.
Turner's communicatJons to Costa
~1Csa and Newport Beach c.fficiaJs this
week agree that Tustin Avenue is the
most logical geographJc boundary line
between the Harbor Area cities.
Turner explains this thoroughfare hu
been used as the annexation boundary by
both cities 10 times, three by Newport
Beach land nibbles and seven datina: back
to 1955 on the Costa ~1esa side.
Suggested solution to the pverlspplng
prj>bl"l" )! wlth!1"awal by NtwJ>Ort Beach
or II!: West Santa Ana Heights anne:s:a:tlon
r~unt and trimming boundaries of the
other to' only Tustin A venue and
eastward. , .
The Pegasus Homeow11ers' Association
backs the liddltit>nal westerly a'IU\fxation
mQ.e by Newporl Beach, while -nts
organized agafnlt It include the Santa
Ana llelghtg, Voten Alsocllllon.
!.lat' tfmo •{lrirJJO<t ~ Ind C<li!&
' Mia le*8 111n!aJW dnr11111101t1on ·la>lda ht theo<'ume 'gtnth.J area. the con-
i S.. ANNF.XATION, Page I)
•
Pendleton Brig ·
Brawl Hurts 26
CAMP PENDLETON' IAP) -One
guard and 25 prisoners were treated for
Injuries after a brawl Sunday night
between inmates at the Camp Pendleton
Pttarine .Base brig, official.II reported Mon-
day.·
The guard and .one pri1oner requited
hospitalization, but names of the Marines
involved were not released. ·
The fi1ht was between white •nd Negro
prisoners In a .compound used hr 250·in-
mates, officials said. Not all o tlle In·
m,w1 ttiok part and lhett was no al·
tempt to break o\Jt, they said.
Bu~ker Visits· Thieu
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Ambmador
Elllwortb Bunker c1lled on Pr~ktent
, Nruyen Van Thiieu Mbrida7 evtnlni: for
lhe first time in nearlf t"6 weeb. 1btre
wH "*'1Jallon the' two may have di ...
cuued tho poalblllty ol el<cllons u part
of a settlement of the Vietnam war.
" . ••
at the next study session July 14.
In their approval of the budget the
council restored one engineering aide to
thi: budget of Harbor and Tidelands
Coordinator George Dawes, who cited
several study projects I n which the
engineering asslstant would be of benefit.
The added cost of the st.all member
was about $2 ,500, since the council, at
Dawes' request, elimi nated a
stenographer-clerk which it originally had
(See TA."( RATE, Page 2)
Mel nnis Hits
Traffic Chief
Over Painting
In a stinging and sometimes grim con·
frontaU on Ptfonday afternoon City Coun-
cilman Don Mcinnis flayed city traffic
engineer Robert Jaffe for opposing stop
si gns, crosswalks and painted curbs on
West Newport's Seashore drive to solve
pedestrian problems.
The obviously angered Mcinnis. whose
constituents are west Newport residents.
told Jaffe to "get off the statistics and
the police department and get out the
paint brush ."
"It doesn't take red paint, it takes cita·
tions," Jaffe replied.
And with that the battle -in which
Jaffe finally surrendered -was on.
RED FOR CURBS
Mclnniii had urged that intersec tion
curbs in the west Newport bcachfron t
11rea should be painted red in some spots
so that· motorists and foot traffic could
have better sight of one another.
Jaffe recommended no legil!llative ac-
tion. ·
"The1 accident records do not reveal
any glaring weaknesses which could have
been remedied by enforcement or
engineering to avert these occurrences,"
Jaffe reported.
He said that nothing could be done until
sidewalks are built and com plete pro-
hibition of parking along the south side of
the street ls ordered.
eUt Mcinnis, his fac£ growing crimson,
said the solution was simple,
TELL'YOU WHERE
"Get a bru sh and a can of paint, and
I'll even tell you where to paint the curb.
And if it doesn't work out, I'll help you
take the darned stuff off," he said.
Furthermore, he said, the entire
roadway from 36th Street to Orange
Streets hasn't a boulevard stop.
J:iffe· said ·a 'skip would cause more
problems than solutions.
Mcinnis Insisted and won another point
- a four.way boulevard stop at 36tb
Street and Seashore Drive.
Mcinnis, joined by other councilmen,
cited the success of a boulevard stop at
(See PAINT. Page 2)
LUCKY READERS
SEE SHOW FREE
Everyone loves to see .a good firework~
show on the Fourth of July, but not
everyone gets t ee one for free.
Some DAI PILOT readers are going
to Is week and get free pa.s,,es
he July 4th show at Anaheim Stadium.
There is no obligation on your part.
The lucky readers. will find their names
scattered throughout the classified 1 Sec-
tion this week .
Better have a ·look right now.
Orange Coast
Weather
The sun may poke his sl~py
head through the clouds for a bit
longer on Wednesday as the Or-
ange Coast enpoys temperatures
in the lower ?O's.
INSIDE TODAY
Sen. Jolin SchmlLt' sez c/n.is
control legislaUon, which lttJ
par.ents decide if' (hefr young-.
sttrs 11JiU take tlte 00!1r1e: has
paS1ed cruicial hurdle. See Storu
Page 3.
Cetlltnllt ' Mt"'"'' " CMooJllff ..... IMvll' ' (Mlle• 11 Mltiu.t "u"''' " (~·~ ' ........... •• ONllll!lttlcitt " .._,_ I .. .,,,.., ..... • lkltl lffM U•ll
lRlff'I~ ' ·-, .. ,, "·-· 1 .. 11 IMCll Merlrth ... 11
l t rl Onllf.., .. Ttllvllllll " -.. """" ' ... ..-. .. WM-• Mel .... • OltM Wllltt " -=. w ... 1111~ .. 11
' I
--.,.--'-coc-=---~~-~------------..
DAllY PllOl N
Pageant Preview
Laguna's Living Art Unveiled
B7 Ricir.tRD P. NAJ.L hlJlolde.
OI IM Dllh' f'IM tttff ~-~~OQe .o.f~Pt!lll<nlfll.,-.JIJ.-
-The wlnk flub iDQtM purr o Wllllamson was part of a Cl't~tlon show·
DAILY P'ILOT 51111 P'~or.
She's A Mini-Winner
Kim Clark, 10, sold more carnival tickets than all th~ boys to win
mini-bike in Corona del Mar Youth Center contest. Phil Ore.(l (left)
won $500 U.S. Savings Bond raffled off at last weekend's carnival.
He collects his prize from Don Bolton, president of Youth Center
board of directors.
From Page l
INSURANCE ...
there were several hundred companies
willing to bid on the plan.
.. There was a lot more propaganda on
alley improvements posted on telephone
poles than there was on this insurance
package," he said sternly.
He charged that the city's use or the
broker of record as a consultant on the
new plan was a "conflict of interest.'.'
Defending his posilion several times.
Kellner said that there was de finitely no
conflict, adding that sin~ the city's in-
surance has been handled by the same
carrier, Aetna. for the past five year, a
substantial reserve has been amassed to
From Page l
TAX RATE ...
11pprove.d for the office. . .
Clerical duties of the office \\'111 be
handled on a pool :system, the council
11greed.
Mayor Doreen Marshall said she hoped
the total budget amount would hold Jinn
up to the time this July wh~n actual
figures oo city assessed valuation come
from the·county. "I hope we don't hav e to open th~s
thing up again and have to go through 1t
like we did last week ...
pay off claims.
.. I think it"s to the city's advantage to
keep the present carrier at this time," he
said.
• "To put something such as this up to
competitive biddin g is absurd," he added.
The lengthy arguments turned to
bickering among the agents about in·
surance theory and techniques for a time
as the weary and si lent council waited.
Ke.ltper continued -his defense ()f his
"'cirk f6r thi city, s3ying "his files were
open to any examination and adding th at
80 percent of ru, time is spent on group
insurance plans for public agencies.
"In fact , I handle more insurance for
Orange County cilies than any· other
agent," he said.
By the time the issue came to a vote it
\Vas nearly midnight.
Councilmen agreed that they would
give ea rly and strong consideration to
putting the group plan out to bid in ample
time for next year's budget.
Councilman Robert Shelton asked com-
plaining agent Bill Warmington how Jong
a bid process would take and the agent
replied "two months at the most.·•
But Hurlburt said he felt it would take
at least six moh thS.
"This thing is being challenged,
perhaps with some rr.erit," Shelton said,
"but it seems it Is just too late to rock
the boat so late ln the budget period."
The council then approved the entire
budget with the insurance included.
time expeallHI MoftdlY n!Jbt lleralded ing bot!I tile Pink Period and the Blue
the 34th coming of Laguna's first lady -Period In the artistic life ·or ·Pablo
the Pageant of the Masters. Picasso. -·
Arms akimbo with photograph I c "The Dispossessed'' will be shoW1J1 be-
paraphernalia, lhe working pre ss side Picasso's "The Tragedy" from 'llis
clustered close to the source of the magic blue period. Another that is sure to be a crowd in woodsy Irvine Bo.wt. pleaser is the Pageant creation of ''The
Their light meter~ measured the in-Rocket Thrower" a work that &tood 4S.
tensity of illusions, art from the ages feet high at tlie New York World's Fair
recreated in life size. of l&M-85.
For the public, the six week! of "living Jn 8 difficult pose, 'Robert Mock of
pictures" begin July tt·and end A»g. 24• Manhattan beach is stopped in molion as
Preview night is July 10 when the full y-he bunches his muscles to hurl the
programmed first performance raises its missile skyward.
curtains on 26 subjects. "Children By The Sea•· shows the
Pageant Produei!r Don Willia mson warm colors and light <lf American im-
Monday night unveiled six of his illusions pressi onist Ed"':ard Henry Potthast in a
to the eye of the camera. They range not typical American beach scene.
only ttirough time but this year even take Frederi.! Remington 's "The Smoke
onA:p~~erica's astronauts land on the Sig nal" is sharp in detail and color con-
moon in July, the Pageant will have its trasts, a scene of American Iudlans.
counterpart, "The Longest Step" painted One ol the most vivid contrasts un-
by Norman Rockwell. veiled by Williamson was the old and the
One <lf the astronauts depicted, John new Olympic Awards. It ,is two subjects.
Young, recently made space history in One a modern Gold Medal like the <lne
the clo.se lunar orbit. won by Lagunan Bill Toomey in the 1968
The painting was technically difficult to decathlon in Mexico City.
create because of ils tremendous amount The other award is a decorative vase of
of detail, gauges, instrumentation, tubes the type given winners of the original
and wiring . It depicts two astronauts games held every four years at the plain
suiting up. of Olympia in Elis, Greece.
Given body by an orchestra and the The 26 subjects in this year·s Pageant
narration of Hap Graham also draws will be about 80 percent new with three
strength [rom its programming as loca· favorites from last year repeated and, of
tions are shifted from the ma.in stage to course, the traditional closing repeat,
the 50 foot upper stage to the woodsy da Vinci's "Last Supper."
Brown, Martin Appointed ·
To City Planning Board
The dean or the School o f
Administration at UC Irvine and a chief
engineer for a Newport Beach aerospace
corporation Monday became members of
the Newport Planning Commission.
The City Council unanimously ap-
pointed Dr. George W. Brown, the UCI
dean, and William Martin, senior
research engineer for McDonnell·Douglas
Astronautics, to the planning posts.
One more appointment will b e
forthcoming from the council to beef up
the commission to full strength.
Dr. Brown , 52, lives at 2401 Bamboo St.
in Eastbluff.
f\.far tin, 31, resides at 1824 \V. Ocean
Front.
From Pagel
PAINT ...
Balboa Boulevard and 36th Street.
Jaffee disagreed.
"That stop is a puzzle to me, and I
\Vonder how it remains there. My only
idea is that it is a remnant to local lore,''
he said.
The council vehemently disagreed,
citing soaring accident rates when the
stop was lifted for a time.
"l don't approve signs inviting col-
lisions that don't occur in an area right
now. It looks like I'm going to back
do\l.'n," Jaffe replied.
He and Mcinnis met privately after the
stud y session to solve differences.
titclnnis emerged with finn plans for
red curbs and the sto p signs.
The council unanimously ratified the
stop sign idea at its evening meeting.
They will occupy posts left vacant by
Ray Copelin and David Curti s.
Brown's term \Viii last-two years, a
completion of Curtis' service period;
Martin will serve a full, four.year term.
In another council appointment Monday
Parks, Beaches aod Recreatiop ,Com-
missioner Holly Polaskl was reappointed
to a four-year-tenn . He~has served since
the start of this year,· aerving out the
unexpired term of his predecec;sor on the
panel.
All the apointments are effective July
I.
Parade to Start
Boat Saf et~ W ~k
A boat parade in Newport Harbor will
kick-off celebrations during the National
Safety Boating Week this Saturday.
Members of the Balboa Power
Squadron will participate in the afternoon
parade opening the June 29 to July S
safety \~:eek.
On Sunday. the U.S. Coast Guard will
examine boats at the Ne.,..·port Beach
Harbor Department dock.
Cosn1os 287 Launched .
MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet Un ion
today launched Cosmos 287, a new un-
manned spacecraft designed f o r
;esearch, Tass announced. All the equip·
ment aboard is functioning normally,
Tass said. ln three long sessions last week the
council trimmed about $50.000 from
budget categories, placing the money into
a street and alley in1provement fund.
One cut the coun cil slill is considering
is in the actual paper and ink bulk of the
document itself.
In its ~1onday study session the council
agreed that perhaps the heavy. fact-f illed
document could be pared dO\l'n and
sim plffied a bit.
Westbrook Pegler Dies
Hurlburt said city aides \l'Ould try. but
the budget has been heavily edited
already.
"I can't see much more we can do," he
said.
DAILY PILOT
D.IANQI! COASl PUil ISl-4tNG COMl'ANV
Rekrf N. W1tl
-ruldtl'tl 81\d l'ub!llhtr
J1et. R. c~rl1Y
Viet PrnkltM 11111 G_, .. M•llfteT
Tho,,,•• K11~a
Editor
Tho ... •• A. M~,,i.rft.
MeM.in1 EGllOt
. J 1ro"'• f. Co!li~I
H-tl lt•d'I
City ld!IOr
Ntw,.t ha• Offlc•
1211 W1tl a1llto1 loul1flll
MtiSillf Ailtlr111; P.O. lot 1171, 92,61.
o .... -..
Cot!• Miu: 3'11 Wn1 l 1v St""'!
L-lffclt: m Foru1 ........... "'"""''an 118'111 3111 $lll $fftll
Colu1nnist Gained F arne for Scatliing Assaults
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI) -\Vestbrook
Pegler. Pulitzer Prize winning columnist
known for his scathing verbal assaults on
some of the great figures in history, died
today at the age of 74.
Death came at 2:30 a.m. PDT, at St.
f\.1ary's Hospital where the craggy.brow-
ed~ fierce-eyed writer was admitted about
three weeks ago.
The cause of death was not announced
but it "'as known tlfat Pegler had suf-
fered from stomach cancer in recent
years.
Al one time Pegler's column appeared
in 186 ne \vspapers and he v.•as reported to
have accumulated a mi!Jion dollars. He
retired to his home he re about five years
ago.
At the height of his career, Pegler had
a gift for viluperation that many fell was
unrivaled in modem times .. He feuded
,.,,ilh some of the greats of his day and
minced no words in describing them.
Presidents were often targets for his
verbal shots. Franklin D. Roosevelt was
"Moosejaw." Harry Truman was a "thin-
lipped hater." Truman countered by call-
ing the columnist a "guttersnipe."
In 1941 Pegler won the Pulitzer Prize
for his expose of labor racketeers and
one of them ruefully commented he 'd
b<'cn "Peg\erized."
His critical faculty \\'as always sharp
and he v.·as alert to expose phoniness in
all walks of life,
Pegle r was knov.11 as a loner and had
few close friends. He Was married early
in his career to Julia Hannan or
Memphis. Tenn. She died in Rome ii]
195$, In 1959 he married rear! W. Doane.
1'hey were divorced in 1961. Later that
sa me year he married Maud Towart and
she was with tUm at hls death. ·
' •
James Westbrook Pagler, born on Aug.
2, 1894, followed in his fath er's footsteps.
His father, Arthur James Pegler, was a
ne\vspaperman in Minneapolis and later
in Chicago.
When he was 16 years old, Pegler took
a job as an office boy in the Chicago
bureau or the United Press, later UPI.
During the Republican National Con-
vention of 1912, however, he got a job
with the lntemaUonal News Service,
helping its experienced men cover the
event. He returned to the United Press
and worked in Chicago, Des f\.1oines, Ne\V
York and Dallas.
In 1916, the United Press sent him lo
London as a special correspondent, and a
yea r later he was accredited as a war
correspondent v.·ith the American Ex-
pediUonary Force in France. Pegler had
a series of controversies wilh censors,
admirals, generals and others during his
London assignment. After the armtstlce
he returned to the United States and was
sports editor of the morning service ot
the United Press from 1919 to 1925.
He recalled once that during his Lon-
don days he talked to the famed cor·
re~pondent Floyd Gibbons, who said he
had elimlnated the middle initial "P."
from his byline. because he thought It
"cluttered it up." Pegl er said Gibbons
:idvised him to drop the byline he was
the?' using of "J. V.1• Pegler." Gibbons
told him that a "Pullman-car'' nttme
such as "Westbrook1" would be better
remembered. Pegler adopted It.
Under !hat byline he: became tamous,
first as 1 columnist fOr the New York
World-Telegrnm, wriUng ''Fair Enough,"
a col umn which was syndicated by United
Feature Syndicate to 180 newspapers.
,
UP'I Tt..,._,.
'30' FOR COLUMNIST
Westbrook P19l1r Dies
Pegler reached his peak in the early
J940's. In 1941, he won a Pulitzer Prize
for his campaign against labor union
racketeers. ~
He "Peglerized" George Scalise, presl·
dent of the Building Service Employts
lnternatlonal Union. with the ultimate
result that Scallse was sent to pri.~n for
JO to 20 years after conviction for forgery
and embeu.lement.
CdM'S DEBBIE SHANNON, IS, BECOMES GOLD MEDAL
D•n• Point's Mary Z•v1la, 25, Applies M1keup '
DAILY P'ILOT Pllo!os by 'Ln P'•Y~
FINISHED PRODUCT SPOTLIGHTED· ON PAGEANT STAGE
In Civing Color, A Replica of Olympic Gold
Red Guns Open Up
Convoy ReachesBenHet
But Relief Temporary "
SAIGO N (UPI) -U.S. mili tary
spokesmen reported t o d a y a con\'OY of
2.000 reinforcements wit h tons of am-
n1unition had battled through encircling
Communist forces to try to lift the siege
of Ben Het ""'here the Green Beret and
South Vietnamese clefenders fought off
four ground assaults and killed 153 at.-
tackers.
f'ro11a Page l
ANNEXATION ..
flict \\'as just sou tl1 of Palisades Road.
Both petitions were denied by the
LAF C on April 10, 1968, at wh ich time a
one-year moratorium on atiY more such
bids wa s imposed and the cities urged to
name emissaries to work out their future
boundaries together.
Costa ?lfesa's Back Bay Annexation No.
1 was filed this past April 10 and clain1s
more than 68 percent of property owners
in the affected area back the proposed
merger. Jnvolved are 237 residents and
117 registered voters.
The Santa Ana Heights Voters Associa·
tion opposing Newport Beac h annexati<>n
of their county territory includes more
than 40 parcels of land .
The spoils of battle at stake in
northward annexation moves by each city
lie in the 238-acre Irvine Industrial
Complex north of Palisades Road and
\vest of the Orange County Airport
Both cities tried to block each other off
by annexation when the prime property
was owned by the l\icDonnell·Douglas
Corp .. but it reverted back to the Irvine
Company under terms of a sales agree-
ment contract.
Costa Mesa has since annexed abou t 40
more acres on the east side of Newport
Boulevard and south of Palisades Road,
an lrshaped chunk from the Santa Ana .
Country Club parking lot <ln the south to
Santa Ana Avenue on the east.
Newport Beactr did not oppose this
Costa l\·tesa move.
But any relief lo Ben J·Jet, a U.S ..
Special Forces camp in the centrali
highlands, was only temporary. Northr
Vietnamese gunne rs in the surrounding
hills hit the camp tl1onday Y.'ilh 199"
rounds of artillery and mortar fire -the
heaviest of the 48-day siege.
Communist gunfire south of Ben Hel
shot dc1vn a U.S. Air Force CIJO Hercure.,
lransport, killing"the six men aboard, an d.
then shot do1~·n an Army UHi rescue
helicopter at the scene, ,~·ounding three
111en aboard.
The U.S. Command also reported l\vo
other aircraft Jost in the stepped up
fighting. • ...
\Vhile Viet Cong units carried ou t a new
terrorist campaign in the Mekong Delta
fa r' to the south of Saigon, military
spokesmen reported a new 4,000-man
Amcri:an offensive in the Khe Sanh area
-Ope ration Utah Flat, v.·hich began
Jun:? 12 and has killed 161 communists at
a loss of 23 Americans killed and 80
ll"ounded.
U.S. ~1arines involved in the operation
one mile south of Khe Sanh added to lhe
loll early today by setting up an ambush
lrap outside their base periineters. -
A spokesman said a platoon of Marines
opened fire on Communists they 5'aw
sneaking toward the base, alerting th~1r
colleagues inside. The leathernecks lhen
retreated back inside the perimeter to
add their firepower to the battle. 'l'he-
Communists kil led three Americans ii.hd
\vounded 13 but lost 44 dead in the attaCk
"'hich failed to breach the defenses. ·
In the latest round of fighting ·1 tie·
Communists shelled _15 allied bases 4rd.
Vietnamese ~O\vns during the night.
Casualties \\'ere reported 11egHgible, ~\~
the new ter rorism in the l\·tekong Dell~
took a heavier toll. · ;
In the Delta tO'.''n of Cai Tau . 60 milet south~'est of Saigon. a bomb set off in a"
mark~t place ti1onday kllled six ci vilians
and wounded 21. A Communist road mtne
near coas tal Phan Th iet killed two
civilians and wounded five. Fivt dther
ci\•ilians were wounded today \\'hen Co~
ntunists fired two 840 rocket grenade~ 1Bi
to a regional forces out()Ost 22 mll'-south ol Saigon , ' .,,,,
I T d .. . ,., .. · r a rt 1
In· ., '
0 nal Social Whirl Tea Begins
. .
•..
' ' '
• ' ;
~ •
TO MAKE BOWS-Chosen through their own inerit
scholastically and 'f9r their contribution to civi c and
philanthropic at:ti vities to be the 1969 Children's
I.Jome Society Debutantes 'vere 15 l.J arbor Area
girls. Pres ented in the ocean vi ew home of M~s.
J ohn Ki lle fer '\'ere the Misses Terry Ann El lis ,
Sharon Tho mpson . Kathryn Leo na Lynch, Elizabeth
Hanson Carver, Margaret Lenore Parker and Dean-
na Kay P eyton (left to right ). Others arc the Misses
Lauren Ann Kalmbach and Dian e Plu mb.
-----,;. x-mont!Rong whlHWilfdOMDflil~tlVillUliegll tllilay-fo
15 Harbor Arep young women with the traditional and elegant Pres ..
entatiOn Tea of the Newport Harbor Auxiliary of Children's Home
Society.
· The girls were introduced as ne\v debutantes during the after·
noon event in the Shoreclifts home of Mrs. John Killefer, to which
their mothers also were invited.
They will be presented during the formal Debutante BalJ in
the Balboa Bay Club Dec. 27, highlighting the holiday season and
climaxing the preball" activities.
Following the announcement and introduction o{ the new de·
butantes, tea was served from a lace covered table appointed in a
gold, avocado and teal blue color scheme 'vhich was carried out
throughout the ocean view home.
Welcoming the debutantes and their mothers were Mrs. \Vilson
V. \Voodman, auxiliary president, and Mrs. Royal D. Tucker , ball
chdlrman. ,
Hostess duties were assumed by the auxiliary members and ball
committee members, the l\1mes . \Villiam C. Adam s, debutante chair·
man ; Robert Hodson, invitations : Renfro C. Newcomb, presentation:
Walla ce Gerrie, deeorations : Robert Diemer, reservations; Frank
Ir. Trane, programs: Richard Hess, preball party; W. Phelps Merick·
el , hostesses; 'William F. Harper, treasurer: Ira W. Smith, photo·
graph ; Terrell L. Root, press, and Killefer, teas and coffee.
The debutantes, chosen by a small group or patronesses, quaJi ..
fy through scholastic achievement and participation in civic and serv·
ice activities.
Presented Dec. 21 will be Miss Elizabeth Hanson Carver. daugh·
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Langhenry Carver Jr.; Miss Marianne
Emison Cox. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Stewart Cox : Miss Terry
Ann Ellis. daughter of l\1r. and Mrs. Fred Victor Newman Ellis; Miss
Laurie Ellen Fraser, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. David Ladson Fraser:
Miss Vir~inia Claire Ho,vell. daughter of Mrs. Robert Yardley and
Ri chard Deane Howell. and Miss Karen Kuemmel Jackson, daughter
oC Mr. and fo.1rs. Robert Evans Jackson.
Making their bo\vs also will be Mi ss Jessica Morford .Jones,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Henry Lincoln Jones: Miss Lauren Ann
Kalmbach, daughter of Mr. and l\1rs. Herbert 'Varren Kalmbctth ;
Miss Lind a Le slee Littlejohn, dau ghter of Dr. and Mrs. Vernon Lester
Littlejohn ; Miss Kathryn Leona Lynch, daughter o~ Mr. and Mrs.
Frank \V, Lynch. and Miss Pamela Jean Meserve, daughter of Mr.
and ri1rs. John Robert Meserve.
Completing the list are lvliss Margaret Lenore Parker, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John Bernard Parker: Miss Deanna Kay Peyton,
daughter of Mr. and l\1rs. Charles Ragan Peyton : l\1iss Di3ne Plumb.
daughter of Dr. and l\1rs. Hugh Julius Plumb Jr., anct Miss Sharon
Thompson, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Farrand Thompson.
BEA ANDERSON, Ed ito r
THMtr, Jll,.. H, IN• N '''' 11
INFORMAL CHAT -Ne\vly chosen debulantcs became acquai nted during
the trad itio nal presenta tion tea in the Shorecliffs home of Mrs. Killefer. Dis.
cussing the responsibilities of being. a debutante are (left to ri ght) the Mi ss·
cs fo.Jarianne Emison Cox, Virginia Claire Howell , Jessica Morford Jones and
Karen Kue mmel J ackson. The 15 young \Vomen are chosen by a comm it tee of
patron('ss es for their scholastic achievements an d contribution to ci vic and
philanthropic endeavors.
~
DEBUTANTE DREAMS -Looking into-lllckering candle-
-light and dreaming of the presentation ball Dec. 27 are the
l\·li sses Laurie Ellen Fraser, Pamela Jean Meserve and
Linda Leslee Llttle]ohn (left to right), ne\V Children's Home
Society debutantes \vho were introduced during the tradi-
tional presentation tea .
Luck's . No Lady: Point of Friendshi .p Made the Hard Way
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A girl I work
"'ith is a fanta sti cally lucky crap shooter.
'Vhenever she ha s the dice everyone ridc:i;
her back and cleans up. I've seen her
make as many as seven passes Ir. a row. Tw~ wee ks ago Lucky went to Puerta
Rico £or her vacation. I knew she'd be in
the c•inos every night -and winning. or
cour!:le -so I ga ve her $150 to play for
1ne. I made it plain that if she blew it I
1vould1't be mad. although I've never
known her to lose. . Tu·u days after Lucky left for her vaca·
llon, !IJ'eceived a telegram which said, "I
hit a lousy streak and lost your dough. So
sorry." I was really 11hook. but figured it
••as bOund lo happen eventually.
ANN LANDERS
'Yes terday Lucky returned. She was
telling the girls in lhe cafeteria that she
had had a great lime -won $600 over
and above he.r expenses. Whe she saw me
standing there. she said, "Too bad about
your $150. ~fy luck changed right afler I
los t yours, Honey."
What dn you think or a friend Uke that?
-CHICKEN INSPECTOR 21
DEAR CIDCK' I think 11'1 wortk 1151
lo find oat whit kind of 1 friertd 1he wu.
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My boyfriend
is ta>:ing a college sUmmer sell!lion in
an other city. He ·proresses his undying
love for me -in wrtUng. Hi1Jotter1. are
wildly passionate and highly de1CT!ptive.
l would die If a member o( the family
opened one by mistake.
ln yesterday's letter he admonished me
for uot resPondlfts in equllfty ardent •
language. He says my .letters are guard-
ed and nc;ncommittal. Now J'rri beginning
to wonder it he writes those torrid lelt~rs
for his own erotic pleasure and wishes
.me to respand in kind 'for addiUonal
sUmulation;or If be winls me to put it in
writing so he can shaw· his friends~ -
BIG DOLLY •
DEAR DOU.: lt'1· eaUtely possible
lht your boJfrieid 1et Wt 0,ttllie1 from
compo1tn1 red·hot epl1Ue1. Bat be 1bould
barn 'em, not mall 'tm. Eiplala th1t be
must not put In wrlt1n1 anything be
wou ldn't "ant rel( aloud to Your moU-er
-Oft tba1 you pradk:e wbat you preaeb.
• DEAR ANN LANDERS : My cousin
married three months ago. She Is so
proud o( having snagged a professional
man irs rcvolllng. The payoff is this: She
inlrodutts hei'self as ~frs. Dr. What-
chmacalllt. ,1'he other day when I told her
il was not In good taste, she replied, "It
saves time. When I• say ~lrs. What·
cllamacallit , people alweys ask if J'm
relattfl t<. the eye specialist."
Whb is rlghtl -FEET FIRST
0 DEA~ET: You are, of cour11e, ht
conserve your bre1lb to cool your •"'Pt
Lovey. Your cousi n Is not lntemted l•
taste -she's lntere1ted oely In le&tlq
people know she m1rrted a doctor .
Alcohol Is no shortcut to social success.
If you think you have to drink to be »
cepted by your friends, gel the fact.f.
Read "Booze and You -For Teen.qera
Only.'' by Ann Landers. Send 35 ctnll in
coin and a long, self·addre.ssed, stamped
envelope with your request.
Ann Landers will be glad to help
you with your problems. Send them tt her In care of the DAILY PU.QT, encl_.
ing a R:l!-ad,dreJSed, stamped . enve:lopa,
•
' .. . . .
Position
Retained
. .
Retaining the ehairman's
gavel of the Woman'• Aux·
lllary to the American Society
of Mechanlcal Englneert, Los
Angeles stcllon' will be ).1rs.
Harold S. Spaulding.
InstallaUon ceremonies will
ta ke place during the aMua\
-luncheon meeting Thursday,
June 26, at 11 a.m. in the
Bluffs, Newport Beach, hosted
by Mrs. Jose ph C. Wldmont
J<.
Others 1aking office during
ceremorues conducted by ~1rs.
Robert W. Cockrell, past
chairman , will be the l\tines.
Alfred A. Lingo, v Ice
chairman ; George J. Barnett
and Raymond C. K e 11 y ,
secretaries, and Arlhur I::.
Bender, treasurer.
During an open house in the
Widmont residence following
luncheon, Mrs. ll. J. Keeling
will be recognized for 25 years
of membership in the aux·
lliary.
Assisting with the <lpen
house will be the Mmes. Clay
T. Coley, Arthur E. Geisler
11nd Kelly.
. . . . ' ....
GOODBYE, MOMMY -Sending Mrs. Charles Mar-
vi n of~ for a busy year of acti\"ily are t\vin daugh-
ters Kimberly {left) and I-folly. 7. Mrs. ~larvin \Vas
installed as president and the Orange Ccasl I\1othe rs
of Twi ns Club celebratccl its first anniversary dur-
ing a dinne r meeting in Francois re staurant, J-fun t-
ington Bc:ich.
Poolside
Setting
For Style
Beauty Is Growin g Th in gs
Mother's Club Lights Golden Club Arranges
Rummage Sale Variety
Giving service to community and school are students from Village View School
\vho are contributing toward Huntington Beach beautification projects. Cooper-
A poolside fashion sho\\' v.·ill ating in purchasing a tree ror the school grounds a re Brownies and Camp Fire
attract members and guests of Girls (left to right) Pam \Varren, Kelly Walker, Laura McClellan and Rox-
Candle on Anniversary
the Robert F. Kennedy C Memorial Society at 11 : 15 _a_n_n_e __ a_.c_e_,_a_n.:.o.:...:.M.:.r_s.:. . ..:G_eo_.:.rg~e::....::K.:.'.:.0::.P::.P..:i.:.s_C;:•::m2p..:F..:i::.'.:.e..:g::u::a::.'.::di::' '::."::.· --------
a.m. Thursday, June 26.
Members modeling fashions
from La Scarpa, Seal Beach,
will stroll the deck of the Hun.
lington Harbour Beach Club
for the second annual benefit
sponsored by the group.
Combining their firs! birlh·
da y celebration with the in·
stallation of new officers were
members of the Orange Coa ~t
Mothers of Twins Clu b.
Heading the active grouo r·f
40 members v.•ill be ~11·!i.
Charles t.farv in of Fount ai:1
Valley, president .
Newport Scene
For Business
Ex:ecuti\'e board members
of the Califomia Federation of
Women's Clubs. J u ni or
~tembership will make the
Newporter Inn their head·
quarters June 26-28 for their
annua l sum mer boa rd
meeting.
Hosting the e\'ent \l'ill be
members of Los Cerritos
Dist rict and thei r president,
~frs. Stephen Pustay.
Under consideration will be
projects for chairmen, plans
for area meetings and gene ral
organiz.ation of the new ad·
mi nistration .
Boredom Beat
By Brisk Pace
Do you have time on your
hands -are you bored - are
you ncv.· ir'I the area?
If a "yes" ansv.·ers any or
these questions. the Auxiliary
of Hoag Memorial Hospital in·
\'ites you to attend one of their
monlhly membe rship
meetings to learn about the
volunteer opportunities avail·
able.
The ne1t meeting will take
place at 10 a.m. on Thursday,
June 26, in the hospital 's
Conference Center. ]f you are
unable to attend at this time,
they are scheduled monthly on
the fou rth Thursday.
For additional informalion
call ~trs. Robert L'nger, 548·
8765.
LEGAL NOTICE
Other officers, all from Hun·
tington Beach. installed by
Mrs. Gene Mondon. \Vestsillc
~1others of Twins, L n s
Angeles, in cluded the ~1mc>~;.
Ri chard Clifton and J;il'I(
Taylor, vice presidents: Fr:•nk
Haroldson , recnrding
secretary; Charles Saunders,
co rr e spending secretarv;
Richa rd Klo sterman,
treasurer, and Don a Id
Stewart, parliamentarian.
Mrs. Clift-On recently was
elected treasurer for the
Southern California Mothers of
Twins Clubs during a state
convention in San Diego.
Also attending t h e in·
stallation dinner in Francois
restaurant were members'.
husbands.
Golden llarbor Club ""·i!l of·
fer a wide collection of items
al a ruminage sale scheduled
for 'l'hursday, Friday and
Saturday, June 26 to 28.
Dishes, kitchen utensils and
other household accessories
will be available along v.·ith
jewelry, toys and clothing. For
late shoppers, the sale at 867
\V. 19th St. in Costa l\1esa \\'ill
be open until 8 p.m. June 26.
The doors will open al 9:30
a.m. all three da ys and close
at 5:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday.
Gilbert Seal. gene r a I
chairman, will be assisted by
other members in arranging
the event.
Hig hlighting other club ac·
tivities will be a party at 8
p.m. on Thursday, June 26, in
Newport Beach i\1 a s o n i c
Temple. Guests of Golden
Harbor \Vhite Shrine o f
Jerusalem \\'Ill be the diamond
jubilee association of Southern
California shrines. Mr. and
11rs. Alwyn Lane will replace
1'ir. and Mrs. Jack Chapman
as watchman of shepherds and
worthy high priestess.
1'1rs. b'I i 1 d r e d Estep
chairman o( the evening, 1\i ll
be assisted by l\lrs. Freda
Barnes.
Horoscope
Reservations for the lun·
eheon show may be made by
calling ~trs. Fred Voss. Foun·
tain Valle y, or J\Irs. Ronald
Tepper , Huntington Beach.
Leo: Be Self-reliant
The society, a communi ty
servlce~rlented organiiation.
now is co-sponsoring an arts
and crafts class in the Colonia
Juarez, Fountain Valley.
'Ille next meeting will take
place in July when new offi.
cers will be elected and goals
re.-d>e coming year estab--
Usbed.
WEDNESDAY 'ucnllon. Get fresh poinl or
JUNE 25 l'iew. Be independent without
By SYDNEY OrttARR displaying arrogance. Avoid
or.e \vho v.•ants to tie you up in
ARIES (March 21-April 19): contract. \'\ait and see.
Financial pressure evident. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 -
Forces are scattered. Don't Dec. 21 ): Guard health. Avoid
say yes to something you can-excess. Kee p reso lutions con.
not immediately a ff o rd . cerning diet. Success o r
Trying to ple&lle others can be failure today depends upon
carried too far. · you. Be recepUve, willing to
TAURUS (April 20 -May learn.
20): Lie low. Do more listen· CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
i.ng than talking. What i.ppears 19): Good lunar aspect today
Comml.ttee lo be a burden is mte<l-il you coincides wilb you< abillly lo
greater confidence in your opi-
nions.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Conflict may e I 11 t
bet ween duty and home.
Concentrate on basic tasks.
The large problenu will take
care of themselves. Push
ahead. Those in authority are
<lR your side.
PISCF.'1 (Feb.19-Ma!'Ch 20)'
Your mind may be on faraway
places. But don't permit this
to degenerate into me re
daydreaming. Take care wtth
what you read and write. Be
aware of subtle nuances.
The club was founded by
Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Marvin
and Mrs. Klosterman to pro-
vide mothers of multiples an
opportunity to discuss mutual
problems, c on d u c t philan·
thropic projects, e1change
twins' clothing and equipment
and provide a social ouUet.
Plans on the Menu
For Ebell Luncheon are patient. Do detail work. be versatile. Your mnuence
Get min"or tasks completed. spreads . People display
Selects ~;~e big projects fo< ano<her1-'----'---,--'---c----------
Varicd plans will be on the ~1cKinnon, state president of GEMINI (May 21 .June 20):
menu when the Junior Ebel\ California Federation of Change, variety are em·
Club of Newport Be a ch Women's Clubs and Mrs. A w • phasized. Much of what occurs
gathers for a lunche on Henry Koehler , state cor· Inner contains element of surprise.
meeting on niursday, June 26. responding secretary. Plans are changed. Some
Tops A. 'd-Members will meet two ~!rs. Jack Grundhofer will Deborah Babcock, valcdic-around you appear morose. I S I I st l lh 'I take cha<ge of the luncheon todan of 11·eslm1'nster Hi'gh CANCER (June 2l.July 22): spec a gue s a e 1• csa Pursue creative endeavors.
We• ht Verde home of Mrs. Harlo\v and join Mrs. Frank l!ughcs in School, was a\\'arded a $200 Relations with opposite aei I g Y Ri chardson when the gather· organizing a white elephant 1 c h o l a r s h i p by the are intensified. Emotions run sale, v.•ith proceeds to aid high l • I if
health committee projecU. careless with what you say. Problems ing convenes at 10 a.m. Weatmlnster Woman's Club. : overs quarre occurs
l\1rs. \Varren Fix w i 11 How to ~1ake Something Out Comprising lhe scholarship Know this and a c t ac·
A new TOPS Club has fonn· preside and present Mrs. Dan of Nothing will be the theme committee were Mrs. Emory cordingly. H AW A 11 AN S H 0 P S
ed in Fountain Valley, and of the program presented by Clifton, chairman, Mrs. David LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
membership is open to all the Mmes. Richardson and Ames and ~1rs. R. E. Pace. \Vhat appears to be 8 definite ~~ Fashion Island -Newport Center
women in the area who are in· Moms Discuss Edward WhitehouR, v.•ays and Other items discussed dur· commitment is subject to ·~·~.l~'. • Open Sunday 1.5 p.m.
terested in losing v.'eight. means chainnan and co-Ing the general membership revision. Ha ve allernative ~l·"
Lettuce·B·TOPS will meet at d chainnan. Their eyes v.·ill be meeting included a new n1elhods at hand. Don't be
'1 :30 p.m. each Tuesday j n Baby Fee ing turned toward plans for a budget for the coming year, trapped by apparent traditloa.1;:=====~~~~~~~~~===== Fou ntain Valley Elementary repeat fall boutiq ue. programs and ways and Key is to be self-f'eliant.
SchOt>I, 17911 Bushard St. The La Leche League of Mrs. James Murar, youth means projects. Mrs. Leo VIRGO (Aug. 23-Se pt. 22):
New officers of the group in· Huntington Beach plans a chairman, will report on pr~ Shaw and Mrs. Ken neth Avoid unneeessary t r.:a v e I .
elude the Mmes. Lyle Bolton, meeting next Thursday, June gress of the youth employment Heggstron1 were in charge or There are responsibll!Ues in
president; Frank Lewis, vice 26, in the Huntington Beach service now Jn its sixth year in rcfrcshinents. immediate viclnHy. Definite
president; Robert A 11 a rd, home of Mrs. Steven Eicherly. the harbor area. A float designed a nd gain indicated. But you must
secretary; George Bau er ~ The discussion which will decorated by club members be available to give your beat.
lreasurer, and Gene Durst, feature the art of natural and spo nsored by the city was LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
v.·eight recorder. feeding of infants is scheduled Court Stella judged th ird place winner in Finish what you !tart. Take
Dr. Richard Gray will speak from 9 a.m. until noon. the Garden Grove Strawberry noth ing for granted. Not wise
"·hen the club meets at 8 p·.m. Further infonnation about ?\.lembers of Court Stella Festival. to delegate duties. You could
ANNOUNCING
Crispin "Cris" Torres
July 15. and additional in· the leagur or advice on i\1aris 1448, Cat ho Ii c The trophy will be presented lose money. unless aware of
formation regarding the ne'"' natural fce~in~ problems may Daughters of America meet to the city council by ~tiring specific duties. Strh•e to im·
,..sun group may be obtained by b~ obtained by calling Mrs. each second and fourth ~ion· prealdent Mrs. Walt.er Conners prove techniques. <E•T~rc'~~T~~u~" "!~~"'11 calling ~·lrs. Durst, 968'4703, or Robert Boulln. 827-0592 or day at 8 p.m. in SL Joachim's and Mn. Patrick Skoropada, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
TM un11ru l1MC1 don c.nltY' 11t 1i can. Mrs. Bolton, 544.aB76, ~1rs. David Watercott 847.ao59. parish hall, Costa Mesa. prnidenL Strained relationship ocaipies OUCT)ft9 1 bu1lnn1 II 1:100 l1ndPolnl W1y,l-----------------------·I~=========================-==::.:::.:::;:=:;::-=~'.::: c-• dtl #Mr, C•llfomlt, .,.... ttie ire.I tlllou1 firm ,,."'9 flt Ill a. J ,.,._,..,._..,
•nd !twit uld tlnn 11 ~ of 111t
foUawln1 "ri.on. wllow "'""' In full Ind 'ltct of rnid91la b •I foollowl: 01.,kl R. Tin . uoa l•"""°lnt W1¥.
Coron1 dt! Mt r. C•lllo"'lt. 0.111<:1 Ju,... 1. !Hf.
Dtvld It, Tiet Sitt. flt C1lllornl•. Ort"M (O\ml¥'
Oii J11nr 1. Ifft, bf'!cr~ ... ~. e tl•'•'Y
P'utllTc Jn 1nd '"' 1e ld ST•I~. P•,,~· •Ii> •-•red 01vld II. Tiet kno"n lG ,,.., le
bt "'' Pt•.on WllOH ntme 11 tub1trllHO foo l!'lr within lnttrvm•nl 1...i •c-nowled1·
H IHI e>"'l:Uled ttle 11mt.
!OFFICIAL SE.I.LI
M1•y II. ~en,.,
No!•,. Publlc·Ct ll!ornlt
P•Tntli>tl Oiiier In
o .. n1e Countv
Mv Comml11lcn Ewpirn
Nov. 71. 11'1
l'ullll1~t<:I 011nge Cot>! Dt l!V Pllet. J....,. J, 10. u, ,., 116' 1011· ..
LEGAL NCYJ'lCE
in CORONA DEL MAR
Toke the first big step
"°""'°1'ds losing weight
ond kMping ii olf Jot
good. Come kl the one
ond en, Weight
1wotchen•.Monv·
lhoosonds af people
throughout the United
Stotes ond in other ports
ol the W'Q(ld succes,lully
lollow our sensible w&ight
control proorom.
No polls. No storvot10'I
diets. You ea1 lhree hearty
rreofs a day ond then
sc-me, ond you lo'e
we iv hr.
0011'1 m.ss this choiice.
r-?·•"<"o(WI JJ.00
\', •~Pr rlut• 12.00 IS NOW ASSOCIATED WITH
DEE'S BEAUTY Sb.LON
703 E. BALBO A -BALBOA
ON THE PENINSULA
673-sno
SPECIALISTS IN HAIR PIECES
•
. ...-.. .. . .-. -.
•
\ .. Costa Mesa .Today's Final ' . .
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL -62, NG. 150, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES
• • • •
CdM'S .DEBBIE SHANNON, IS, BECOMES GOLD MEDAL
Dana Point's Mary Zavala, 25, Applies Makeup
DAILY P'ILOT P'twttls ltJ Ltt "''"'
FINISHED PRODUCT SPOTLIGHTED ON PAGEANT STAGE
In Living Color, A Replic• of Olympic Gold
Pageant P review
Laguna's Living Art Unveiled
By RICHARD P. NALL
Ot .... Diiiy' ..... , ll•rf
'11le wink of flash bulbs and the purr of
lime exposures Monday nighl heralded
the 34th coniing of Laguna's Urst lady -
lhe Pageant of the Masters.
Anns akimbo with photograph l c
paraphernalia, the working pre 1 s
clustered close to the source of the magic
in \\'oodsy Irvine Bowl.
Their light meters measured the i°"
t.cnsity of illusions, art from the ages
recreated in life size.
For the publi c, the six weeks of "living
pictures" begin July 11 and end Aug. 24.
Pre.view night is July 10 when the fully-
programmed first perfonnance raises its
curtains on 26 subjects.
Pageant Producer J?on ~il.li~.90n
~·londay night unveiled six of his illusions
to the eye of the camera. They range not
only through time bu t this year ~ven take
on s~ce. As America's astronauts land on thfl
moon tn July. the Pageant will have ib
counterpart, "11le Longest Step" painted
by Norman Rockwell.
One of the astronauta: depicted, John
Young, recently made space history ip
the close lunar orbit.
The painliJ11 was technically difficult lo
create becauSe of Its tremendous amount or detail, e:auges, Instrumentation, tubes
and wiring. It depicts two astronauts
&uiting up.
Given body by an orchestra lOd the
narraUon of llap Graham also draws
stren&th from Its programming as 1oca·
Hor.II are shtfted rrom the main stage to
the 50 foot upper stage to the woodsy
hillside.
One of the works presented by
Williamso~ was part of a cl'eation show·
ing both the Pink Period and the Blue
Period in the artistic life of Pablo
Picasso.
"1be Dispossessed" will be shown be·
side Picasso's "The Tragedy" Crom his
blue period.
Another that is sure to be a crowd
pleaser is the Pageant creation of "The
Rocket Thrower" a work that stood 4rt-
£eel high at the New York World's Fair
of 1984-65.
In a difficult pose, Robert Mock of
~fanhattan be.ach is stopped in motion as
he bunches his muscles lo hurl the
missile likyward.
"Children By The Sea•· shows the
warm colors and light of American im·
pressionlst Edward Henry Potthast in a
typical American beach scene.
Frederic Remington's "The Smoke
Signal" 11.'lbarp in detail aad color con-
trasts, a 90Cne of American Indiai)s.
One of the mOlt 1 vivid conlruta· u°"
veiled by WllJlamson was the old and the
new Olympic Awards) lt Is two aubjects. one a mod~m Gold Medal Ull:e the one
_, by Logunan BUI T-y In the 11111
decathlon In Mexico City.
The other award la a decoraU•e vase of
the type given winners of the original
games held every (our ye~ at the plain
of Olympia in Elis, Greece.
The 26 subjeclS in this yca r'1 Pageant
will be about 80 percent new wllh l.hree
favorites from last year fepe:ited and. of
course, the traditional closina repeat,
da Vinci's "Lan Supper."
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 2~. "1969 TEN CENTS
Besieged Camp Relieved
More Troops Needed as Reds Renew Barrage
SA1GON (UPJ) -U.S. military
spokesmen reported t o d a y a convoy of
2,000 reinforcements \vlth tons of am-
munition had battled through encircling
Communist forces to try to lilt the siege
of Ben Het where the Green Beret and
Sout h Vietnamese defenders fought off
four ground assault.s and killed 153 at·
tackers.
But any relief to Ben Het, a U.S.
Special Forces camp in the central
highlands, was only temporary. North
Movie House
Given X Rating
Bv Merchants •
Based on a random opinion poll olfcred
before the Cost.a Mesa Planning Com·
mission Monday, downtown businessmen
give a proposed SOO·seal w a I k • i n
moviehouse an X rating.
Under a zone exceplion permit ap-
plication by the f\.1orco Investment Com·
pany, Los Angeles, the Cherie Cinema at
1885 liarbor Blvd., would have no on-site
parking at all.
Existing facilities in Ule already tralfic-
choked downtown district would ap·
patently be expected to sufrice for night-
ly moviegoers' use, but not if the pro--
perty owners have anything to say.
They had plenty of walk-on lines Mo°"
day.
"The idea of a theater without parking
is so inconceivable it doesn't even war-
rant comment," declared A. Vincent
Jorge115on, 1533 AnUgua Way, Newport
Beach, owner of an adjacent shopping
tenter.
TIJt!.clty planning staff had suqtMd
labflng of the matter until a confete~
\vith the investors July 7 al a study
session and official consideration at a Ju·
ly 14 regular meeting.
This was done after a parade or op-
ponents had their chance to speak on th e
matter, since no one representing the
developers showed up due to the an·
licipated postponement.
Downtown area property owner C. Ken-
yon Wells reminded planners that he
had to buy land for off-site parking
before he could even obtain a building
permit fo r his project.
He said It would be inconceivable for
them to allow such a lack of parking for
the theater operation, citing other new
Orange County moviehouse developments
which offer vast Jots.
"We can't imagine any business com·
ing in without providing parking." added
jeweler J. C. •lumphries, with property
on Newport Boulevard and nearby Center
Street
Costa Mesa Tomorrow Inc ., spokesman
Tom Nelson said his group is also totally
opposed to the request by the in vestment
company. although city officials have
also received two letters favoring it.
Comm issioner Don •lout said it seem.~
a waste of time to hold the matter ove r if
the theater chain can't come up with an
offer of adequate parking space for
cus.omers.
"But if they can't," explained Planning
Director William L. Dunn, "they're riding
a dead horse already."
Commissioners then voled the delay to
allow the proposed developers to have
their say, indicating the theater project
will probably be a hopeless request
\v ithout parking facilities.
Questioned about what type of en-
tertainment might be offered at the pro.
posed theater, Dunn said the applicants
listed ordinary cinema fare shown at
most moviehouscs.
''Of course that offers rather a wide
lalitude," he quickly added .
Bungli11g Burglar
Tries, Tries
Again But Fails .
A bungling burglar huffed and puffed
and finally blew it tarly today, setling off
an alann which brought police to the
scene of his fourth attempted entry at a
Costa Mesa shopping canler.
Patrolman Al Muir rolled up to lhe Vic·
lnrta Mes& Center, 11~ Victorta SL.
about 3 a.m.. but found nothifll taken
from any of the suites.
Attempted entry was made at OWl I.I·
quora; the Olden TlmCs tavern : llelmul's
H1tirslyling, and the Victorta ~faa
Barber Shop.
Offlcor Muir said pry marks on th e
doors of the shops and stores indicated
the would·be burglar tried live djff~t
tools but none worked. l ..
Vietnamese gunners In the l'iurroundlng
hills hit the camp Monday with 199
round s of artiUery and mortar fire -the
heaviest of the 48-day siege.
Communist gunfire south of Ben Het
sho t dt'wn a U.S. Air Force Cl30 Hercules
transport, killing the six men aboard, and
then shot down an Army UHl rescue
helicopter at the scene, wounding three
men aboard.
The U.S. Command also reported \\l.'O
•
other aircraft ,lost In ., stepped up
fighting. .
While Viet Cong units carried out a new
terrorist campaign in the Mekong Delta
far to the south of Saigon, military
spokesmen reported a new 4,000..ma.n
Ameri.:an offensive in the Khe Sanh area
-Operation Utah Flat. which began
June 12 and has killed 161 communists at
a loss of 28 Americans killed and 80
wounded. .•
U.S. MaMnes involved in the operation
Sti~king Ne~k O nt
Will Glue Hold Guilloti1ie?
LONDON (UPI) -Michael Booty slak·
ed his life today on his company's new
glue.
Booty, 27, will place his head in a
gcillotine in the chamber of .horrors at
M.adame Tussaud's Waxworks tonight.
The guillotine has been altered so that
its razor·sharp blade is suspended by a
rope which has been cut and rejoined by
the new glue .
U the glue holds lhe blade should end
its deadly plunge just above Booty's
neck.
If it does not hold, a spokesman for
~Iadame Tussaud·s said the blade will go
through Booty's neck "like a butcher's
knife going through a piece of steak."
The household glue is called "Power
Pack" and its manufacturers, Borden
Chemicals Ltd., claim it Is the "strongest
glue In the. world."
"Our engineers say it is 99.9 percent
certain the git.le will hold," Booty said
bravely. "Believe me, If I wasn't con·
fidenl, I wouldn't be doing it."
Booty's w If e Susanne, 26, said she
prefers not to watch and will remain
home wlth their 7-month-old daughter.
His firm said they have Insured his life
for 100,000 pounds ($.240,000 ).
Mesa, Newport in Conflict
Agai11 on A1mex Requests
. '
Ju:1t one wee~ 8.fter announcement o( a
tentative boundary agreement, Cosla
~1esa and .Newport Beach officials are
about to go before county authoritie.'!
again wllh Ironically conflicting an·
nexation requests.
The Local Agency Formation Com·
mission (LAFC) will listen to arguments
in behalf of three annexation plans at its
2 p.m. meeting Wednesday in Santa Ana.
Talks between councilmanlc boundary
committees from Newport Beach and
Costa Mesa -advised b}' LAFC e:it·
eculive officer Richard Turner -seem·
ingly hammered out mutual agreement,
but it was rejected June 16 by Newport
city offi cials.
Now, on the eve of 'a decision, th e
LAFC is advised by Turner to approve
the Costa Mesa Back Bay .i\nncxation No.
I , and either disapprove, o. ask Newport
Beach to withdraw and change. its O\vn.
Basically, the conflict centers on
Turner's suggestion that Tustin Avenue
-the traditional boundary line between
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa -re-
main so.
Leaders of bolh cities agreed to this in
theory at their respective June 18 city
couneil meetings, but Newport Beach
leade rs then voted to continue their own
annexation attempts.
The confticling annexation proposals
.09 of Stude11t
-That's Status
Of Scl1ool Budget
Newport-Mesa school trustees tonight
will decide whether to add 9/looths of a
student per teacher.
That is the point budget deliberatons
are now down to.
\Vhat sounds like the height of
ridiculousness is the result of a budget
practice called staffing ratios. Here is
how it wor~s:
Each schoo l h; allotted staff -regular
leachers. spcciallsts, pr I n c I P. a I,
secretaries, parent or college student
assistants -according to the number of
pupils attending the 11chool.
In the case of high schools, the board is
now considering increasing the staffing
ratio from one full-time perso.n per 19.16
students to one per 19.25 students.
Of course there are no 9/JOO!hs
students ; numbers are rounded off. But
there are one-half '!tall persons such as a
parllinfe secretary -even one-third
persons like music teac'hera who dlvkle
time between three schools.
·rhe arrangement gives schools flex·
ibility to work out their own program on
the premise that student needs are dlf·
ferent in ditlerent parts of the school
dl!lrict. "
Also propo.'led tonight la an Increase In
the lnternlediate school staffing ratio
from one to 21 upward to one to 21 v,
students.
That plus a cent and a half t.ex increase
over the previously conttmplated tax
hite would about offeet the proposed
budget dericit of $104,000.
(aced .with the problem o! overlapping
are the Costa Mesa Bick Bay No. 1, a ·40.
acre parcel between Tustin and Santa
Ana avenues, north of La Canada Way
and north and south of Mesa Drive, which
bisects It.
Newport Beach's La Canada annex, 23,
acres west of Tustin Avenue between
Orchard Drive on the north and 660 feet
soulh of University Drive overlaps tho
Costa Mesa proposal on its eastern half.
The th1rd annexation proposal is
Newport Beach's West Santa Ana Heights
bid, an 89-acre seclion between Palisades
Road on the north and Orchard and Mesa
drives on lhe south, Santa Ana Avenue on
the west and a point west of Acacia
Street on the east.
This was originally 116 acres. but pre>-
lestlng. residents led Newport Beach of·
ficials lo shave off 27 acres on the
eastern half of the annexation package.
Turner's communications to Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach c.fricials thl3
week agree that Tustin Avenue is the
most logical geographic boundary line
between the Harbor Area cities.
Turner explains this thoroughfare has
been used as the annexation boundary by
both cities 10 times, three by Newport
Beach land nibbles and seven dating back
to 1955 on the Co.sta Mesa side.
Suggested solution to the overlap ping
problem ia withdrawal by Newport Beac·h
of its \Vest Santa Ana Heights annexation
request and trimming boundaries of the
other to only Tustin Avenue and
eastward.
The Pegasus •lomeowners' Association
backs the additional wesl"erly annexation
move by Newport Beach, while opponents
organized against il include lhe Santa
Ana Height~ Voters Association.
Last time Newport Beac h and Costa
Mesa leaders struggled over annexation
bids in the same general area. the con·
(Set ANNEXATION, Pase %)
Hospital Work
To Start Soon
Construction of a 112·bed convalescent
hOlipltal in the city'11 devel oping medical
district Is expected to begin within two
weeks, the Cos ta Mesa Planning Com·
mission learned Monday.
The status of • the facility i t 2750
Newport Blvd .. was discussed when com·
missioners routinely approved re·issue of
a conditional use permit expiring this
month.
They approved transfer of permit
ownership for the convalescent hospital
at the same thne It WIS renewed, since
the original applicants, Mrs. Ruth Lacy,
and Stabler & Associates, have aold out.
~1orrl! and Lillian Wallack or Palm
Springs, arc to be the new owners of the
convalescent center near COstl Mesa
Mf!:morlal Hospital and the purchaser
hopes to get 1tarted immediately, ac·
cording to realtor Roy McCardlt.
A bulldlng permit for the clinic was i5.~ued May 29 a_nd a~roval ha• also been
r~elved from the State Depertment of
Public Health and the State Fire
Marshll, city aide& noted.
I
one mtle souLh of Khe Sanh added to the:
loll early today by setUng up an ambush
trap outside their base perimeters.
A spokesman said a platoon of Marines
opened fire on Communists they saw
sneaking toward the base, alerting their
colleagues inside. The h:athernecks then
retreated back inside the perimeter to
add their firepower to the battle. 'nte
Communists killed three Americana and
wounded 13 but lost 44 dead in the attack
which {ailed to breach the detenses.
Pro Gridder
Makes Gain
On Apartments
CincinnaU Bengals professional gridder
Phil Spiller ran into little real i°"
terference Monday while carrying the
ball for his planned BG-unit luxury apart-
ment complex in Costa Mesa.
The Costa f\.1esa Planning Commission
recommended approval for the three-
story development at 2311 to 2323 Elden
Ave., complimenting the Newport Beach
athlete on Its design.
Planning Director William L. DuM said
the project will be the first in Costa Mesa
to feature parking In the three-story
building, plus a third-level tennis court
and recreational facilities.
Three owners of nearby property were
skeptical of the project, but their worries
over a four-foot wall being too low to
screen vision were dispelled because the
wall will be atop a two-root base.
One other owner of rental units in the
area criticized the density in ft...2 duplex
and C.2 commercial uines, but was told
SpJJJer could build 32 units on the four
separite lotis without any special penniL
The.. fonner Orange Coa$l CoUege foot·
ball star 5ald his Spiller Investment Co.
project features several novelties unseen
in this area.
Rolling mounded property within the
Ci!ntral greens complex wiU aJJow tenants
to walk up to all three floors without
needing stairs, while elevators would be
unnecessary too, he said.
Spiller 'xplained the primary need for
~levators has always been to get new
tenants' furniture and belongings to the
upper noors but a delivery ramp wiU
eliminate this problem.
According to city figures, the 50 one-
bcdroom and 30 two-bedroom units. plus
related development will occupy 22 per•
cenl of the ,l~nd be tween Newpor.t
Boulevard, Elden Avenue and 23rd and
Wilston Streets.
Planning Department experb also
noted the surrounding area has been
gradually deteriorating with lime and the
Spiller project should prove to be 1
catalyst to reverse the trend.
Spiller is a linebacker for the Cin·
cinnali Bengals and was schooled in the
(See APARTMENTS, Page%)
LUCKY READERS
SEE SHOW FREE
Everyone loves to see a good fireworks
sho\V on the Fourth of July, but not
everyone ge ts to aee one for free.
Some DAU. Y PILOT readers are going
to luck out this week and get free passes
to the July 4th show at Anaheim Stadium.
1'here is no obligation on your part.
The lucky readers will find their names
scattered throughout the classified sec·
lion this week.
Better h§'a a.look right now.
Oraage
Weather
.The sun may pbke Ills sleepy
head through the cloud s for a bit
longer on Wednesday as the Or·
ange Coast cnpoys temperalurC3
in the lower ?O's.
INSIDE TODA l'
Sen. Jolin Sc11mitz' sez clasr
control legislation, '"hich lets
pore1t11 decide if their young-
sters wiU take l1te course. hat
passtd cruJcial hurdlt. Sea Stor11
Paoe 3.
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c
ZO Oppoae Pia•
I
Triangle Owners
Stop ·cul-de-Sac
Proper\y owntra In the 10<1lled
~ Triangle 1re1 ol Costa Me11 livid
• landholders' dream Monday nlcht when
the p-lng conunlAslon simply dee)l4i<·
ed 10mtlhln1 they didn't like.
A lf'OUP of about 20 peraona tw-ned out
to enmJ.nt • .peelftc layout of streets
needtd for acceu to 1n arta bounded by
Patdarlno Avenue, Bl.ktr Street, the
future Corona de1 Mar Frttway and
Bristol Street.
The ctty Pla.nn!nr Department had
Ul<id tlle Englnwlng Departmeet !or •
Front P .. e I
ANNEXATION .•
flict ,. .. just IOllth of Palludes Road.
Both peUtlons were denied by the
LAFC on April 10, lNI, at which time a
one-year moratorium on any more auch
bids WIS impo1ed and the clUea Ufled to
name emlllariel to work out thtlr future
boundaries together.
Cotta Mesa'• Back Bay Anne11Uon No.
t was flied this put April 10 ind claims
more than 6S percent of property owners
in the affected area back the proposed
merger. Involved art 237 ruidtnta and
117 registered voters.
The Santa Anl He.i&hll Voters Auocia·
lion opposing Newport Beach annexaUon
of their ccunty territory includes more
tban 40 parcels of land.
The spoU. of battle at stake in
northward anne1aUon moves by each city
lie In th& 23kcre I.rvtne lndUJtrial
Cmlplei: north of P1Usadee Road a.nd west at the Orange County Airport.
llolll ctlles lr1etf to block ueb other of!
by ...... 11on when the prime prope1 ty
w11 owned by the McDonnell-Douglu
Corp., but tt reverted blctt to the Irvine
Company under tuma of 1 Ales agree-
ment contract.
COltl Men baa alnct armu:ed about 40
more acres on the wt side of Newport
Boulevard 1od south of P1llaade1 Road,
an !Ahaped chunk rr... the Santo Ana
Country Club porlttng loL Oii the IOUth to
Santi Ana A venue on tbe east.
Newport Btaeh did not oppose this
Cotta Meaa. move.
Copter .Girls
Visit Newport
Two girl reperten who atv• tnlflc
nporU ln>m • hellCO!>llr ...,. ...... ol
the Aeronutrorllc Toutmasttr Club
Wednesday in the Villa Marina at .
Newport lleaeb. ·
D1tm O'Day and Eve O'Day ride a
helicopter over the Los Angeles freeways
and &Ive on the zpot traffic reports OYer
KABC Radlo.
New zlate of ofOcer1 for the year is
Jim Chronister, pmldent; Tom Wholley,
educational vice prttldent; Don FUe, •d·
mlnlllrative vice· president; Dick: Mu·
well. secretary: Dick Sproul, treasurer;
and Joe Czyz, sergeant or anns.
Excursion Set
To Disneyland
An excursion to Oisntyland ha& bttn
planned by the Ne\Vl>Ort Beach Puka,
Beaches ind Recrtatlon Department for
July 2.
The cost ol the trip ls: Children (a-11~
$3 ; Juniors (12-17) $4; 111d Adults $4.25.
The price includes admission and 1 ten.
ride Ucket book.
Buses will leave Mari.nera Park,
Newport Harbor Community Youth
~nter, Eastblulf Park and the 38th St.
Park and return around 4 p.m.
Rt&istraUon for the trip can be made
with l'tC'l'Utlon leaders at I o c a l
playgrounds. The registration deadline ts
June 30.
(
O~llY 1'110!
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•
atudy Of the arta ln ttrms ol future
street service, but property owners
weren't loo pleased wilb the offering.
Basically, the plan called for a cul-de-
sac thoroua:hfare cutting the rectangular
parctl nortb-to-soulb down the middle,
with eatt-west slreets approximately
quartering the rest.
Acting as spokesman for the party,
Walter Shellenbarger of 789 Paularino
Ave. reminded commissioners lhst volun·
tary right-of.way dedication would be re-
quired.
One stubborn holdout could prevent the
enUre project, he noted, at which Com·
mh:lion Viet Chairman Charles A. Beck
nodded.
Without mentioning names, he said that
IOl'De property owners have been
thwarted by the city in developing pr~
jects ptndlng compleUon of a major arta.
WKl uae study.
"You all know bow I feel about tht lack
of results of the study," commented Ed
Mlltenburg of 773 Paularlno Ave.,
recently denied permission to develop 1
major apartment complex.
"1 don't think the area will be preserv·
ed by splitting It up into small Iota," he
added.
PlaMine Director William Dunn in·
terrupted to point out that the apeciUc
pl111 for streeta in the area was drawn up
as a public service, not something to be
rammed down unwilling throats.
Speakers hinted they wouldn't object to
a street plan shovr>ing a thoroughfare
down one edge Ol the area, leaving it a
solid piece of ground, not carved through
the midd1e.
Commissioner Don Hout observed thst
oppoliUon to the Enaineering Depart-
ment concept seemed uniform among
landowners who were present.
"I bave found throueh the years,"
coo.ntered Commissioner H.J. "Jimmie"
Wood, "that people who are In fli.vor of
something don't always show up."
"ll they don't want It, let's throw it in
the wastebasket until they come in and
ask for a street," he continued, "they'll
have to open up that property to develop it."
Commissioner Hout then moved for
denial and the measure passed 3 to 0.
Commission Channan Nate Reade was
absent and Commissioner Jack Hammett
abs~ed, since be works in the affected
area.
A rtlated specific plan for exten!llon of
Denver Drive aouth ot: Paularino Avenue
and wt ol Babb Stree~ keeping cul-d ..
ate ends on the thorougbf.are wa1 a~
proved without objection.
Mesa f.ofC Picks
Past-Present
Theme for Booth
Baalcally following tbe 19159 Orange
County Fair and Exposition theme of
contrasting present area development
aaalnst lhe put, lhe Costa. Atesa
Chamber of Commerce has plcktd its
own booth display idea.
"Yesterday Meets Tomorrow," is the
title announced today by ~mmltlee
chairman Ken Fowler, with photo slides
planned to show Costa Mesa industry and
business then and now.
Chlnling projectlons will show the in·
dividual slides on a rotation balil during
the July 15 to 20 event at the Orange
County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
The Womtn's Division of the Chamber
of Commerce Js In Charge of the business
and industrial booth and will accept
volunteer help to staff the display area.
The format Includes one slide to show 1
merchant the way he started and another
indicating progress and expansion to dale
in the booming Harbor Area.
Baseball Teams
Asked to Sl1un
Namath's Bar
CINCINNATI (AP) -National Learue
President Warrtn C. Giles said Tuesday
he has asked that all leaiue players be
notified it would "not be in the best in·
terests of baseball" if they patronize Joe
NamaUl's Bachelor III bar in New York .
He said, however, that "no penalty for
doing so was iod.icsted'' in the com·
munication to the various clubs.
Namath, assertedly retlffil
quarterback for the New York Jets of the
American Football League, has been
under lire for his connection with the
tavern,
Curious Girls
Get Peek at Jail
Thret pre-t«n girls \\'ho w1nted 1 loot
at the Inside of 1 Costa. Mesa achoot
nurse's office Col It P.fonday. along with 1
peek at the interior of the local paUce
department.
The youngsters, one I l Ind the other
12, were caught at Everttt Rea School,
2051 Pomona Ave.J..~nd turned over to
Patrohmn Hal ·Holbrook I o r In·
vesllaallon.
Nothing was taken and the ofrlce h.111d
betn left unlocked, so they were released
·to thtlr parents pendlnR juvenile court
action against them [or Ule(1l entry.
I
• •
Ul"I T,...,.,.
'30' FOR COLUMNIST
W11tbrook Pealer 0111
Reagan Signs
Antidrunken
Driver Bill
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today signed an antidrunken
driver bill that presumes a motori5l in·
toxicated i£ one-thousandth of his blood is
alcohol.
Reagan signed the measure, a key part
or his legislative program for two years,
at a special ceremony in his office.
"And, now I'm delighted to do this,''
the Republican governor said as he sign·
cd the bill. "It was a long and hard fight
but we won."
Reagan, nanked by legislative
managers of the bill, Assemblyman W,
Craig Biddle <R·Rlverside), and Sen.
Gordon Cologne (R-Indio), said the new
law will "go a long way toward com·
batting the problem drinker who insists
on el'ldangering the safety ol the rest of
our citizens."
The law makes a blood alcohol reading
of .10 percent ground for presuming that
a motorist is too tipsy to drive legally.
Drunken Driving
Suspect Caught,
Jailed in Mesa
A Fountain Valley car .salesman was
jailed early today aftt'r two policemen
alleJedly' chased the suspect down and
found him anned, after he allegedly
drove by a doughnut shop where they
were !lopped.
Gary R. Jewett, 25, of 16676 Markham
St., was booked into Cos:ta Mesa City Jail
on suspicion of drunken driving and car·
rying a concealed weapon.
Newport Beach Police Sgt. Don
Burdsall and Reserve Officer Robert
~ncan said ,they finally stopped Jewett
1n the l~ block of Newport Bouleva rd
about 3 a.m. and called Costa Mesa
police for aid.
They said lhe suspect was driving south
in northbound lanes of the divided
boulevard, but they headed him off by us-
ing lhe old Newport Boulevard frontage
road.
Palrolman Duncan told Costa Mesa
police he found a loaded .22 caliber
automatic on the seat of Jewett's
Car whJ!e the motorist was beifli ques-
tioned.
Body in Canyon
ldentif ied by
Girl's Stepf atl1er
CLAREMONT (UPJ) -A nude body
found in a canyon on a fire road was
identified today as that of 13,year-old
Virginia Smith.
Identification was mt1de by the girl's
stepfather, Harry Neumann. He said she
left horne Monday lo visit a friend 1od
failed to return.:
The body, beaten and stabbed, w•s
found Monday night in an area popular
~·Ith motorcyclists.
Sheriff's homicide detectives said the
girl had been stabbed in the back and
beaten on the head and there were
numerous scratches on her body. An
autopsy was ordered.
From Page I
APARTMENTS.
11arbor Area, wllh his development and
investment compainy office at 1649
Westc:llff Drive, Newport Beach.
He also recently undertook operation of
the reputation.spotted Elite Sauna, 2826
Newport Blvd., with the city's ble.s&lna:,
turnln1 It Into a private athletic club.
The plannlfli director noted Mond•Y
thal Splller ls not the only proreaslonal
football playtr Investing In the future or
Costa Mt111 and the entire Harbor Area.
Chlca10 Bears quarterba:c\o.. Rudy
Dukich Is also Involved in local land
development.
Spiller thanked the comml~lon for Its
helpful handling of his apartmenl project
Monday night, since he reports July 1 t to
begln tralninJ for I.he f•IJ football bettlea.
. ....... .
Columnist Pegler Dies
I
rr:.~~~ ~~~~:e~.~~~~ed~~~.w~!r-:.!!:!. ~~~~~.
Pq:ler, Pull tier Prize wlnninl columnist she was with h1m 1t his death. a column which was syndjcited by un-lt81
known for bls scathlng verbal assaults on James Westbrook'Pegler, bom on Aug. Feature Syndicate to 180 newspapers.
some of the greet figures in history, died 2, 1894, followed In his father's footsteps. .Pegler reached hls peak lri the ~•rly
today at the age of 74. His father, Arthur James Pegler, was a IHO's. In lt4J, he won a Pulitier' Priztt
Death came at 2:30 a.m. PDT, at St, ~ws~apennan In Minneapolis and later for his campaign against labor urilOD
Mary 's J1ospital where the cragl)'·brow· tn Chicago. racketeers. · •
ed, fierce-eyed writer \Vas admitted about When he was 16 years old, Pegler took He "Peglerized" George Scalise, pre:sf;
three weeks ago. a job as an office boy in the Chlca8o dent of the Buildin& Service Employe·s
The CMUJe ol death was not annouooed bureau of the United Presa, laler UPI. IntemaUonat Union, with the ultimate
but it was known that Pegler bad auf-During the Republican N1Uonal Con· result that ScaJlse was sent to prison for
fered from stomach cancer ln recent vention of 1912, however1 he got a job 10 to 20 yean after conviction for forgery
years. with the International News Service, and embezzlement.
At one time Pegler's column appeared helping its experienced men cover the
In 186 newspapers and he was reported to event. He returned to the United Press
have accumulated a million dollars. He and worked in Chicago, Des Moines, New
retired to his home here about five years York and Dallas.
ago. In 1911, the United Press aeDl him to
At the height of his career. Pegler had London as a speclal ccmspondenl, and a
a gift for vituperation that many felt was year later he was accredited as a war
unrivaled in modem times. He feuded correspoodent with the American Ex·
lvlth some of the greats of his day and pedltlonary Force in France. Pegler had
minced no words in describing them. a series of controversies wllb cemors,
Presidents were often targets for his admirals, generals and others during bis
\•erbal 15hots. Franklin D. Roosevelt was London asspent. After the annistlce
•·titoosejaw." Harry Truman was a "tbiJl. he returned to the United States and was
lipped hater." Truman countered by call· sports editor of the morning service of
ing the columnist a "guttersnipe." the United Press from 1119 to ll'J5 ..
In 1941 Pegler won the Pulitzer Prize He recalled once that during his Lon·
for his expose of labor racketeers and don days he talked to the famed cot--
one of them ruefully commented he'd respondent Floyd Gibbons, who said he
been "Peglerized." had eliminated the nllddle lnltla! "P."
His critical faculty was always sharp from hls byline, because he thought it
and he was alert to expose phoniness in "cluttered it up ." Pegler said Gibbons
all walks of life. advised him to drop the byline he was
Pegler was known as a loner and had then using o( "J. W. Pegler." Gibbons
few close friends. He was married early told him that a "Pullman-car" name
in his career to Julia liarman of such as "Westbrook," would be better
Memphis, Tenn. She died in Rome in remembered. Pegler adopted it.
1955. In 1959 he married fear! \V. Doane. Under that byline he became famous,
They were divorced in 1961. Later that first as a columnist for the New York
Grand Jury Opposes
Chief of Finance Plan
A Senate bill which, if approved, would
c1npower county supervisors of many
California counties to appoint a director
of finance got the thumbs down sign t0s
Jay fron1 the Orange County Grand Jury.
County legislators are being urged by
the investigative panel to vote "no" on
Senate Bill 646. They are informed by the
jury that creaUon of such an office would
1um over the powers of the auditor<on·
troll er, tax collector and treasurer -all
elected officials -to an officer "directly
responeible to the board and the county
e:tecutive."
Passage of the bill "would mean that
Independent elected officials, cbarged
with the duty of collecting, retalninl and
disbursing county funds, would be replac.
ed by an appointed officer who would be
directly responiible to the county ad·
mlnistraUon rather than to the people,''
lhe Grand Jury says.
Legislators are urged to remember
that "the offices of auditor-controller, tax
collector and treasurer are an in·
dispensable part of the system of checks
and balances necessary to good govern·
ment."
''It is essential," the Grand Jury
claims, "that the holden of these posi·
tions be independent from Ole ad·
ministrallon in lhe perfonnance of their
duUes."
, .
T'Wo· Mo-re , (;ls Conliicted
• -c.
In Presidio .. ftlutiny ·Ease -: -
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ~ A military
court-martial board Tuesday coovicted
two soldiers of mutiny for participating
in a sit-down demonstration last Oct. 14
at the Presidio Stockade.
Convicted were PvU. Michael E.
tifurchy, Cone<>rd, Calif., and Lawrence J.
Zaino, Toledo, Ohio. They were the 23rd
and 24th soldiers convicted of charges
stemming from the stockade protest by
27 GI's over the fatal shooting of a fellow
prisoner and allegedly substandard
stockade conditions.
The eight-man board deliberated one
hour Tuesday after spending one hour IS
minutes Monday night without reaching .i.
verdict. After delivering the verdict!, the
court began considering extenuating and
mltlgallng factors in deciding the sen·
Mesa-Newport
Lions Leaders
To Be Installed
A new slate of Costa Mesa·Newport
Harbor Lions Club leaden will be
formally installed tonl1ht (Tuesday) In
ceremonies at the Mesa Verde Country
Club.
New President Tilak Lall wi\l head tM
board for the 1969-70 term, with First
Vice President Dom Raciti and Second
Vice President Carl Henrikson as right
and left hand men .
Others taking office will be Secretary
Bus r~oster, Treasurer Frank Hruza, Tail
T\'llster Ed ?.-1agulre , Lion Tarner Conrad
!Shorty ) Schearer and BulleUn Editor
Tweed Stone.
Directors .arc Hank ftornsveld, Lewis
Simon, Tom Rea and Henry Vaughn.
Fullerton Man
Killed by Truck
DOWNEY <UPI) -Terry Robm
De"lq:o, 21, of Fulltrton. WIS 1dlled tod•Y
when he wu run over by a delivery truck
which he had directed lo back up.
tences.
Twenty other soldiers among the
original 27 protestors have been con·
victed of the mutiny charge at a series of
trials this year and given sentences rang-
in g from nine months to 16 years in
prison. Some sentences later were reduc·
ed and two other soldiers were convicted
of lesser charge!.
The three soldiers who have not been
prosecuted escaped from army detenUon
and are believed to. be in Cl.nada.
Oil Liability
Measure Dies
In Committee '.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The oenata
governmental efficiency committee today
killed Assembly Democrauc leader Jean
M. Unruh's bill to hold petroleum com·
panies strictly liable for damaae caused
by oil spills. '
The measure wa:; defeated on a split
voice vote. The committee had held 1
lengthy public hearing on the bill June S
and postponed actlon.
Unruh, a potential candidate for
governor next year, promptly uuiled
Gov. Ronald Reagan for failing to asaist
him in gaining committee approval. .
"I have to conclude that tht governol!.
ls opposed to this measure, despite what
he sayi," Unruh toJo newsmen after the
committee action. ..His 1 i I e n c e
represents where he stands on this
issue."
Unruh introduced the bill shortly after
the massive runaway oil seepage In the
Santa Barbara Channel that washed
ashore and gummed mile$ of Southern
California beaches.
The bill would have made the oil com·
panles pay for 1ny damages reaardlw o[
what caused the lea.ks. The only e1·
emption from liability would have been if
a boat struck a well.
Unruh said he was "very upset and
disturbed" by the defeat of this measure.
He said the legislature was "negligent in
not acting to put this into law."
Unruh said he "sensed" that the bill
had run into trouble in the committee and
had hoped Reagan could have IWlsted In
getting it "out of this Repu,bllcaD-
dominated Cilmmlttet."
He said the defeat of the bill indicated·
the legislature's "acquiescing to the
power that the special interest k>bbyilla
have .here."
"[' don't think it was killed on Hs
merit," he added.
Albert Shults, an influential lobbyist for
eight oil companies, had questioned the
bill's cons.UtuUonality during the hearing.
He challenged whtther the state could jn-o
voke its will on oil operators drilling on
the .continental shelf three miles oU tbe
California coast in federal waters.
Bunker Visits Thieu
SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Ambaaudor
Ellsworth Bunker called on President
Nguyen Van Thieu Monday evenln& for
lhe first time ill nearly two week•. There
was specul1tion the two may have dis.
cussed the poMlbllity of elections as part
of a settlement of the Vietnam war.
The accident occurred in the lol of the
d<!partment store where Dtlago was
employed.
The lruck driver, Horal Klnntn, 30,
Glendale, told ofUctra Dtlago told him to
back up but apparently failed to get out
of the way. Klnnen was not cited.
Old Bridge Torra Down
Delaa:o 1.lved at 1201 S. Gilbert St.
~'orty-year-<ild 381h Slreet Bridge to Newport Island has !alien vlclim
to wrecking crew. Old bridge is being replaced by temporary Marcu1
Avenue span until $124,302 repla cc1nent project is completed in
September.
-----·--· ~-..-----------------------------------------------~--~~-~~~r
Foster, .38,
Gets Control
Of Beach CO.
William E. Foster, 381 officially took
over the local office ol the ltuntington
Beach Co. Monday l.IJd was introduced to
community Jeadera b)' Senior Vice Presi-
dent Edmund Hartaook o( San Franciaco.
Foster replarei Jack Fn>ggatt, '5, who
has been transferred to the Whittler of.
fiCes al the Chevron Land and Develo~
ment Co.
Both the Huntington Beach Co. and the
Chevron Land Co. are subsidiaries of
Standard Oil Co. of California.
Also intrcdllCfJd was Richard J,
Miescie, 44, who will take' over the duUea
of Slanley J. Dont, 12, who j! being
asslgntd to the San Francisco olflc<s of
Chevron !And and Development Co. u
vlce president in charge of planning of
land developments.
Foster and his wlfe Karen hav.e one
child and will live at 2110 Main Sl He
was graduated from the University of
Washington and Calllomia State College,
Long Beach and lfas been with Standard
Oil Co. for 14 years.
He assumes the dutJe11 or vice president
and general manager and member of the
board of directors o( HunUngton Beach
Co., developer ol projects such as the
HU11tington Seacllif golf course and coun·
lry club, Huntington Center, Huntington
Shores Motel and Huntington Pacific
Apartments. \...
Froggatt's new duties will include being
vice president in charge of development
oJ Standard Oil Co. properties in Southern
CaJifornla. He 3nd his wife Suzanne and
their three children will conUnue to live
in Long Beach. _
Miescke and his wife Fay have three
children, two of whom are twins. He has
degrees from the University o f
Washington and Stanford University and
has been with the Standard Oil Co. for 20
years.
DAILY 'ILOT ,...... rt Dli. s.mek.,
Inner Tubes Are 'In' '
Orange Coast beachgoers John. 6, SaUy, 7, and Jane Cole, 3, (Crom
left) can find litUe fault with airplane tire tube family acquired for
seven Cole children to play with. As anyone can plainly see, the giant
tube has a number of uses. All it takes is some imaginative little
people.
•
T'tsdlf, J,nt 24, 1'16' S • DAILY PfLOT !J
Sex Class .Curb OI('d
' '
Sch1f!:_itz Le islation PW!ses Big Hurdle
SACRAMENTO (UPI) The
legial.ature's main bill to control aex
education h&f cleared a crucial Puf<tle
following a warning that school( might
polot cbildrln toward a life of
''perversion, ·homosexuality, promiscuity
and prostituUon."
Theblll,~eady pa"ed by the Stnate,
would perm.it a paren~ to withdraw his
child . fl'Qln a sex education cOurse he
didn\ like
The ~e was approved Monday
night by,tthe ' .AMembly Education Sub-
committee on Instruct.ion and Tea:cber
RelaUoos.
The 'tnly subcommittee member who·
oppoaed the bill was Assemblyman John
Vasconcellos ( I)..San Jose).
"All this does," he contended, "is, pro-
ject our fears of se1: 4pon our children
and drive another wedge between the
adulb, who caU the shots, and the kids,
wbQ art trying to learn.
''There's nothing kids are more curious
about -a.Dd adults too, I think -than
sex."
ne bill moved to the full education
committee. 1£ 1Uccessful there, it will be
debated ·on the Assembly floor.
The author, Sen. John G. Schmitz (R·
TusUn), said he now feels "rather con·
fident" about final passage. "Th.is was
th e big he&ring," he said.
"Our chances used to be somewhat less
than 50-50. Now, they're somewhat more
than 50-50."
f Under the blll, a achoo! could not re·
quire that 1 pupil attend a clasa where
.. hum.ah rtproducUve organs and their
fu.ncUom and ~es are dHCrlbed, n ..
lu&trated or diJct.lsiied1 ti
A'school would have to tnrorm a parent
In writing that a sex education class was
planned. 'I1le parent could notlf7 the
school in wrlttng hia child was · not to at-
tend. The parent also could frulpecl the
instructional material. .
"l think a Cal,bollc parent ought to
have the same right against con-
traceptive teaching as an atheist pareilt
has against prayers In the classroom,"
said Schmitz, a Roman Catholic.
"My bill calls for nothing less than
what the atheists have been given by
Supreme Court decisions. ti
One supporter, Dr, Allen E. Priest of
Sacramento, contended sex education
"will lead to a generation of peot>le In-
volved to a rouch greater ex!ent ln
pervenlon, homosexuality, prom,lscuity
and prosUtuUon." The physician said he
Jong has campaigned against sex educa~
tion. ·
Crashes Hurt 100
NEW YORK (UPI) -Two Long Island
Rall Road accidents, one a twfHrain col-·
lision in Pennsylvania station Injured
almost 100 persons Monday. Al( but four
were treated at hospitals and released.
Rabbi Ju118 Glasner, representing tho
United Orthodox Rabblnil• of Los
Angeles, arcued 1111 we Introduce aex
education into our schools we will eiempt
parents from their obligations" to teach
it themselves.
••we want to prepare them (children}
for maturity," he added , "but we don ''
want to over prepare them."
An opponent, Dr. John Tribbey, a
psychiatrist and a part·time lnstructor.·at
the UC Davis Medical ~1. tailed the
measure ''a throwback to the puritanical
approach."
The subcommittee's attitude was sum·
med up by Assemblyman Leroy Greene
(l).Sacramento).
"I'm of the opinion all children should
take sex education courses," he said.
"But there are a few who don't want it.
And the question is, are we goln1 to over-
ridet hem."
Another subcommittee m e m be r,
Assemblyman John L. E. COllier (ft.Los
Angeles), said "I don't think we should
force this (sex education) down thell'
throats any more than we ghould foru a
religion down their throats."
The bill was opposed by represen·
tatives of teachers' associations.
T h e seven· member . subcorrunlttee
delayed action on a resolution byi Schmitz
asking schools to delay adding new ex:
education classes until the legjslature can
study the subject. r·····yo·u······aa:AND···1 . : : 2300 Harbor Blvd., Harbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa •
• His new duties Include being vice presi-
dent in charge of engineering and opera·
lions for the Hunlington Beach Co.
Dorst, his wife Nancy and lheir five
children, will move to San Mateo and will
asSume his new dulies In planning of land
developments immedia~ly.
~ i
.1 :
"
Huntington Youth
Pleads Guilty
To Drug Charges
' A Huntington Beach youth has pleaded
guilty to charges that he was in
possession of dangerous drugs when
police raided a Delaware Avenue home
last April 12.
Gary Lee Petty, 18, or 2516 Delaware
Ave., was one of eight persons arrested
by officers at what was described by
police as a "swinging pot party." Police
said drugs and the persons accused of
using them "went flying out the windowl
as we moved In." ·
All were booked on drugs charges. Of.
ficers confiscated what they said was a
•;considerable quantity" of marijuana.
Superior Court Judge James F. Judge
&et July 17 as the date on which he will
sentence Petty after examination of a
probation report.
Grove Woman
Dies of Injuries
Mrs. Trudy McKiernan, 37, of Garden
drove, died Monday at Palm Harbor
Hospital of injuries received in a M a y
22 accident on Garden Grove Free1ay
1161
JOO
County Traffic
Death Toll
1963
JOI
near Trask Avenue when her car
overturned.
Coroner's deputies 'said Mrs.
McKieman had been partially para1yzed
5ince the accident.
Court Battle Delayed
In Beach Sc1wol Flap
Court action on a dispute between the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District and a union whlch claims to
represent more than 400 of it.s teachers
was delayed Monday by Superior Court
Judge Claude Owens.
Judge Owens set July 2.1 as the new
date for a hearing or, the fracas between
the district and the in~ructors. He con-
tinued until at least that date Ute tern-
Spider Spree
'¥wlin' Outbreak Brin.gs All Kinds
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A man walked
ln1~ plunked a spider down on Delona
Da.ts' desk. Her big, gray·blue eyes got
blgg¥!r and gtayer. But she didn't
fiOl'eam .
f!J'be critter was ln a pill bottle. He was
dead. Besides, she was getting used to it.
This' k1nd or thing had been going on
dO'Zebs of times a day for more than: two
weeks.
As receptionist for the county health of.
fice, the little brunette has been deluged
with spiders, of all shapes, colors and
sizes -dead and alive -since the begin·
ning-of the South American violin spkl.er
hunL She prefers them dead.
It started when Mel Tho1npson. a
naturalist, found one of the brown violin
spiders -about the llze of a dime -in a
suburban Sierra Madre park. Drop for
drop • the vkllin spider's vtnom is
dead'uer than a ratUesnake'•·
'Ibompson fOWld 54 more tn 1 recrta• ilO/i I building at the park. Then
ttteafchers from the University of
~lhern calilomla fourKI a dozen ln 1
rilarby women's club and a churCh.
The county dispatched eight tweezer...
packin1 spider hunters, armed with
•
specimen vials and nashlights.
Building by building, nook by cranny,
the hunters turned up spider after spider.
Grand total : IQ!.
Quite a find, since South Americl!ln
violin spiders -named for the light
violin-shaped marking on their backs -
had been seen but once before In North
America. That was sis: years sgo In Cam-
bridge, Mass.
Meanwhile, nearly every time the
mailman arrived at Delona Davl.5' desk,
he brought in a batch of spiders, most of
them dead, In envelopes. And'lt 11eemed
every third person who walked in the
door had on,e in a jar, a matcbbo1: or a
pill bottle.
"They're trying to help," she said.
"But some of those spiders are prtUy ug-
ly. We get some pretty big ones
sometimes. And when they 're not dead,
focget It !"
Few ol the hundreds brought In were
South American violin spiders. And
nobQdy has rePorted being bitten.
William Waldron, ~nty entymologlst,
said he hopes to learn more about lhe
spidera' life habits ~ and how the1 got
here lrom Sooth Amerka.
•
l ,
Worried About
Dog in Back Seat
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Mulbeim, of SJ
HunUngtoo Ave., HunUngtoo Beach, JH'~
kloking for a "Pixie."
Their "PiJ:le" is a 31ni.year-old, bow·
legged dachsund, with small stature
and Iona: brown hair.
Pixie was inside the Mulheims' car
when it wu stolen between 2 p.m. and 4
p.m .. Saturday, o(f the parking lot of .tho
Builder'a Emporiun'I, Goldenwest Slred
and Westmfnster Boulevard.
"The dog might have jumped out of the:
car ·when It was taken," says Mr.
Mulhelm, who .ls more worried about Pix·
le than the car. Anyone who spots littJe
Plxie can phone 53&-t195.
: • :
i •
f • •
I WE'LL REMAIN CLOSED TODAY, TUESDAY, TO PREPARE FOR
THIS FABULOUS MONEY SAVING EVENT! : OllLS' .... sa..so BELLS & FLAIRS ......
INFANTS' SLEEPERS • ... $4.00 -··-·· .. --... _._ .. _
.... $2.00 SNOOZT sns
: • T-SHIRTS i w..i..w.ort ..
Val . to $4
lh .. ltwd ?10lltltles
SORRY
1ss
GIRLS'
DRESSES
SAVE
GIRLS
TOPS-T-SHIRTS
•TOPS •
• BLOUSES •
• T-SHIRTS .•
ty foMon ,. .. .,
l1t, UMlml 9H.tlt1er;
• : • i
Y• .tti SJ.10 :
t t : • 111 t
: 199 !
166 1 •
111 I
t No Lay·A·Ways • No Refund
No Bonus Cards-No Exchange i0
ERMUDAS )88 i i IAJIKAMERICARD • MASTfll CHAR&£ • CASH Val, to $5 · f
i Y oungland iEA•s 288 I l ........................................ :~;:: ........... # •
" a ., .
---· -
4 DAIL V I'll.OT TlleldlJ, June 24, 1969 ''
'
Cargo Plane Smashes Miami · Btiilding
''We don't know what happened."
said a spokesman as employes sat
in darkened offices in Salt Lake
City "Make it funny," he said. "Say
we didn't pay our bill." The black4
out of several minutes was at the
main office of Utah P o w e r and
Light Co. •
The teen C1r11teen of Greeter
Johmtow11, Pa., doesn't like to
see kid.I atnoking, but it's got a
smoking room in the building
ju.st the same. And nnack in if.t
center is a wooden cofftn filled
with sand and yellowed cigarette
butu. This 1s the ashtray. It's
called the Cancer Room, with x-~
ray& of good and bad lungs hang-
ing on the black wall&. It alao
hes gray drapes and eerie blue
lighting.
• Howell Alicb. ci vic and business
leaders have honored one of the
best loved citizens of this small
southeast Michigan community -
Willie Wright, a 93-year-old Negro
window washer. Nearly 150 friends
attended a birthday dinner to give
Wright a present of. $600. He says
he had never had a birthday party
before. Wright has lived in Howell
for 65 years and is still washing
windmvs along Main Street as be
bas for nearly 50 years. • Maidstone, England police said
they are hunting for police identi·
fication cards forged in the print·
ing shop of the local prison. •
Britain's Prince Charles and hi! sis-
ter Princess Anne, enjoy a royal Tomp
in Windson Great Park. Cllartes will
br invested as the Prince of Walts
Ju ly 1. • 8ern1d1tte Devlin, at 22. Britain's
youngest la"'•maker, says she will
quit politics within the next two
years to go back to school. Miss
Devlin was elected to the British
Parliament in April to represent
Lhe Northern IN!land constituency
of Mid-Ulster after campaigning on
a platfonn of civil rights for Ro.
man Catholics. "I have done my
job-I have no wish to become a pro-
fessional politician," she said Sun-
day. "! just 'vant to izo back to
studying psychiatry at Queen's
Unlversity, Be lfast."
DC-4 Holocaust Kills 10;
' '
DamageTotals$1Mil~ion
MIAMI (UPI) -n>e old [our-engine
plane, smoke pouring from Its tall and
flame,, spewing from an engine, circled
like somt stricken giant bird over the ci-
ty.
Then -a screarnln&, banging "ball of
firt" -lt fell Monday toward a business
district on a busy slJ:-lane traffic artery
to 1ttlami International Airport.
"My God, it's going to crash," scream-
ed Antonio Qd over the telephone at a
service station. "lt'1 going to hit m." A
man bolted f r o m a truck. A woman
sprawled in her yard, covering her head
with her hand!.
Other spectators watched horrified as
the lumbering Dominican Airlines cargo
plane sheered the roof off a twMtory
medical center, bount'ed off the 36th
Street thoroughfare and slammed into an
automobile repair shop. Gasoline and
flaming wreckage shot over a two-block
area.
Ten per1ons were killed and 12 others
injured, one criUcally In the holocaust.
"It looked like the aftermath of a
World War 11 bombing raid on London,''
said a fireman.
Police Lt. J ames Reese estimated that
property damage would total at least $1
million.
Inve.stlgator1 from the N a t l o n a I
Transportation Board 1Ummoned airline
officials and Federal AviaUon Agency
representatives to a mtttlng later today
io try to find out what caused the ac-
cident.
The DC4, a plane which went out o£
production in 1947, crashed three.
quarters of a mile from a runway clear-
ed for ita emergency landing. The four aw members -Capt. Jorge Bujosa,
Copilot Carlos Brador, Flight Engineer
Carlos Gonzales and Caesar Molina -
were killed.
Five persons were killed In the garage,
Jncludlng the two sons of the owner
·CbarUe Knapp -Clyde, 17, aod CW[ord,
t5. A pede1bian was tilletfl ·by fiylng
wreckage.
Authorities said there was a poulbJllty
there may be other bodies in the rubble.
where rescue squads worked through the
night.
Many or the vlctims were dismembered
or burned beyond recognition.
The scene, about five miles from
downtown Mlami, is a short distance
from where an El S&lvador Airlines
cargo plane crashed on takeoff in 1955,
klllng two crewmen.
The DC4, carrying a general cargo and
bOurld for the Dominican Republic, ex-
perienced trouble before it cleared the
runway around 3:30 p.m. EDT.
"Smoke W&! coming from the tatl of
the plane when it was taking off from the
airport," said a Federal AviaUon
Administration {FAA) controller.
The plane's no. 4 engine quit, but Bu-
josa climbed to 1,000 feet and beaan
circling. He asked for emergency
clearance to land. Then the no. 2 enflne
burst into flamea.
Bujosa could no longer keep the
stricken plane in the cloudleu sky. It
began falling.
Lazily circlln1 over the teeming resort
city, it skimmed the traffic-laden Miami
Beach-Airp)rl Expressway and sliced the
roof !run the 36th Street Medical Center
with Its left -wing. The fuselage jumped
the street and crashed into Charlie's Auto
Center.
The right wing and a fuel lank skidded
several hundred yards down the street,
engulfing a pinball and pool supply firm
Jn flames. One engine crushed an unoc-
cupied car. The plane's tail landed on an
outboard motor boat parked on a trailer
beside Knapp'a gara,e.
Miami Mayor Steve Clark said the
tragedy pointed up the need for phasing
out Miami International Airport, which
has between 1,100 and 1,200 flights daily,
to a new super jetport being comtructed
1n the Everglades.
Report Brings to Light
Crippling AEC Plant Fire .
WASHINGTON (AP) -U.S. nuclear
missile production has bttn halted loc
perhaps the rest of thi1 year because of 1
crippling fire at an Atomic Energy Com-
mission plant.
This rather stunning situ11tion -sUll
unment.ioned publicly by the government
-is disclosed in the back section of a
J,400-page volume of official testimony
recently released by a Sen11te ap-
propriations subcommittee.
Government s>urce.1 also a:lve strong
indications that testing of antlmlsslle
Crime Rate Rise
Marks Suburbia
W ASHlNGTON (UPIJ -The crime
rate rose faster in the suburbs than in the
cities during the first quarter of 1969, tbe
FBI reported today.
The FBl's publication, UnHonn Crime
Reports, disclosed an average increase of
ll percent in suburban crlme while the
average rose 10 percent ln ·cities with
population of 100,000 or more compared
to the first quarter of 19611.
Nationally, the FBl's crime index
showed a 10 percent rtse in crimes during
the thrtt month period, with every
category showing an lncreue.
warheads may be delayed by the blaze.
that hit a plutonium-handlini facility at
Rocky Falls, Colo.,-May 11. The offldal
AEC position is that Safeguard deploy-
ment schedules will not be set back.
The impact of the fire, first serious
blaze at an AEC plant, was laid before
Congress behind closed doors nine days
later when AEC leaders urgenlly ap-
pealed for $45 million to make repairs.
Most nuclear weapons r e q u i r e
plutonium to trigger their atomic
warheads.
Air Foret Maj. Gen. E. B. Giller,
wigned to the AEC, told subcommittee
members the impact on the weaporis pro-
duction IChedule would last "a few
months to perhaps a year," according to
prelinUnary tstimates.
sen. Allen Ellender, ~La.. asked
GWer: "Will th.Ls lire retard you .iD the
production of all mlssifes?''
GWer's immediate words In reply were
deleted from the publlshed transcript but
then he said: "We ~ estimating al thi1
.moment six months plus or minus three,
meaning a maximwh of r'z;laybe nine.''
Or. Glenn T. Seaborg, AEC chairm1n,
termed the $45 million request to get the
Rocky Flats plant back into operation
"very urgent ."
"lf we didn't receive the additional ap-
propriation it would delay by an · un-
determined amount the production dates
(deleted)," Seaborg said.
Tornadoes Strike Again
Rain Adds to Woes in Nortlieastern Arkansas
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AERIAL VIEW OF MIAMI AIR CRASH KILLING 10 SHOWS DEMOLISHED BUILDING
Tall Section of Dominican AJrllnes DC-4 Cargo Plane Can Be Seen Top Center
Final Fueling
Prepares Apollo
For 'Big Test'
CAPE KENNEDY (UP!) -Launch
crews pumped thousands of gallons of
kerosene into Apollo ll'a Saturh 5 booster
rocket today to prepare for its last big
teat before heading toward the moon July
16.
The four-hour fir!l stage fueling opera.
tion began at 7:30 a.m. PDT whi le
astronaut.a Neil A. Armstrong, Michael
Collins and Edwin E. ·Aldrin practiced
moonship flying in spacecraft trainers.
Arm.strong and Aldrin are scheduled to
land on the moon July 20 while Collins
orblt.s the moon in a command ship.
The 383-loot space machine's rma1 ma·
jor ground test, a dress rehearsal
countdown, is acheduled to start at mid·
night Thursday. It will put the rocket and
U.s Apollo spacecraft through virtually
every launch day operation e1cept engine
ignition. ,
"We're really sitUng pretty," Apollo
Launch Operations Manager Paul C.
Donnelly s a I d Monday as technicians
worked to finish the Uckllsh job of fueling
the three Apollo spacecraft modules and
the Saturn's orbital control system.
Donnelly called the job one of the most
hazan:lous In readying the spacecraft for
flight. It Involves filling tanks with
cllem.lcals 10 corrosive the men handling
them wear bulky protective suit.s and
masks.
The tedious spacecraft fueling ran
almost a day behind and pushed back the
start of the full countdown rehearsal
from Wednesday to Thursday midnight.
Donnelly, however, wasn't worried
because he said the prelaunch timetable
had nearly a week ot delay built lnto it.
"We're better off than ever." he said.
The astronauts spent most of Monday
practicing in a spacecraft simulators and
planned to keep this up for the rest of the
week. Today, they concentrated on the
re-entry phase at the end of their eight-
day flight.
The Apollo 11 mission ends July 24 with
a splashdown in the Pacific Ocean.
Judy Garland
Ovei·dose Reports
Called 'Rubbish'
LONDON [AP) -Report. speculating
that Judy Gari.and may have died from
an overdose of sleeping pills are "pure
rubbish," a Scotland Yard spokesman
says. A coroner bas ordered an inquest
Wednesday into the death of the 47-year·
old star.
PoUce said Monday there a number of
pills in the singer's home when Miss
Garland was found dead in her bathroom
Sunday. The pills were nowhere near the
body but have been taken to Scotland
Yard for e1amlnallon, ofClcers said.
Police doctors performed hn autopsy
Monday but did not disclo.se the results.
"As of th\1 moment nobody in the Yard
knows what she died from. or will we un-
til we know the re.Su its ol the autopsy," a
police 9pokesman said.
Doctors said following the autopsy they
were taking eome of Miss Garland 's
organs to a Scotland. Yard laboratory for
further e1amlnatlon. 'The organs wert not
ldentUled.
Sht had clrrhosla o( the liver and had
been told by a London surgeon that abe
was "l\vln1 on borrowed llmt."
The pl\y'liclan, Dr. Phillip Lebon, said
lie and another doctor had examined Miss
Garland el1ht years ago and estlmattd
then she had no more than five years to
live.
Lebon said he had "read the riot act"
lo Miu G1rh1nd and had wsmtd her not
to drink. She wat known u a ht1vy
drinker and for years hsd consumed
maey ldndl ol pllla.
•we Ser'7e Publi~'
Warren R eplies to Nixon Charges
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon's highly unusual appearance before
the Supreme Court Monday gave Earl
Warre n a chance to say some things that
probably had been on his mind for some
time.
The reUrlng chief justice'• response to
Nixon's eulOiY contained thoughts which
he perhaps would like to have voiced dur·
ing the 1988 presidential campaign.
In those week& Nixon was saying recent
Supreme Coort decislON had given "a
green light" to people bent on a life of
crime. He was promising to fill court
vacancies with "strict consttuctionlst.s"
of tbe Constitution.
But Monday the President praised
Warren's "dignity, example and
fairness" and said he has "helped keep
America on the path of continuity and.
change which l.s so essential for our pro-
gress."
In reply Warren reminded the Presi-
dent the court has no constituency and
serves no majority or minority.
"We serve only the public interest as
we see It, guided only by the Constitution
and our own con.sciences," Warren said
in a mild tone.
No one could think or a time when a
president has addressed the Supreme
Court. Nonnally the contact between the
judicial and executive breaches is con-
fined to the law suits that come before
the high tribunal and an annual reception
for Supreme Court justices at the White
House. Nixon himself told newsmen after
appointing Warren E. Burger as War•
ren's successor that he believed a presi·
dent and a justice should keep their
distance.
Nixon did not explain why he chose to
step over the barrier M o n d a y ,
Furthermore, political enmity between
him and Warren had dated back to 1952,
when Nixon worked for Dwight 0.
Eisenhower in Californis 's Republican
Convention delegation headed by \Varren.
the state's governor.
Despite some tiffs in the meantime and
Ni xon's continuous criticism or the court
in the recent campaign, the relationship
between the two appeared to have sof.
tened when Warren participated at 1'ix·
on's inaugural oath-taking.
Earlier the president.elect asked War·
ren to continue serving to the end of the
current tenn. Warren·s acquiescence
solved an embarrassing problem at the
time. He already had resigned but had
started the 1968-69 tcnn because the
Senate had rejected President Lyndon 6.
Johnson's nomination of former justi~e
Abe Fortas to succeed him.
Aft.er naming Burger, a member of the
U.S. Court of Appeals here, Niion called
an unusual news conferen ce in which he
explained how he undertook the ap-
pointment.
HEW Appointment
Finch Wins on J(nowle s
ButParty Fig ht Po ssibl e
WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert H.
Finch, long a confidant and political ally
of President Nixon, apparently has won
hi3 fight to have Dr. John H. Knowles
nominated as the naUon's No. l health of4
ficer.
But the victory raises the specter of a
party-splitting battle in the Senate, wilh
the admlnlstratioa and a coalition of
generally liberal GOP Young Turks pitted
against the veneTa))le Republican leader,
Everett M. Dirksef!.
It was learned ¥onday night Nixon Is
almost certain to ,nominate Know\e1 as
assistant secretary for health and scien-
tific affairs in the Hta.llh, EducaUoo and
Wellare Department.
Knowles, HEW Secretary Fi~h's IOT\f' ...
tirn~ choice, has been opposed by
powerful elements in the American
f\1edical Association and its prominent
ally, {)Irk.sen.
Knowles is director of Massachusetts
General Hospital in Boston, and until
Monday the AMA opposition had been at·
tributed to his advocacy of such things as
universal health care plans.
But a Wheaton, Md., physician, Dr.
James J. Nordlund, said in a letter to
The Washington Post thal Dirksen'• ad·
ministraUve asst•t.ant, John R. Gom.ien.
hMI toki him that "because of the heavy
~al support given the Republicans
duting the recent electiON, the American
Medical Alsociatlon was inslsleat ..on
nominating one us.istant aea-etary, in
partlcu1ar the assistant secretary for
health and scientific affairs."
Gomlen did not deny lhe report. The
.M1.A bad no comm(!nl.
Knowles said at his 1t1a.ssachusetts
summer home Mooday night the uoof·
ficlal reports were "news to me. 1
haven't heard a peep."
lf Dirksen slicks tn his opposition, the
ia.'nlt of who Is to be as.,11t1nt tterttary
••ill pale btslde the largt.r l.uue of who
controls presidential nomlnt1Uons, t h e
President or Sen. Di rksen.
Olrk1'efl claim' credit f o r blocking
other Nixon appolntmtnl! and for forcing
the removal ol one holdover Democratic
)
UPI Ttll!IMll
CENTER OF STORM
Dr. John H. Knowles
official. ,,..
But the Illinois senator has no liking for
a showdown that could, If he io!'lt. sertoi.ts-
ly damage his prestige as party ltttdt:r
and thus crimp his power. ·•u
Dirksen has been noted In tl'lt' pnst·.ror
his agility in changing positions on IT\lllor
issues and personalities, but hn!! bee~~·
communicative about a switch on
Knowles. ·• '
But if the nomination arrive3 In tho
senat«! without somt: sort of ac-
com1J1odatlon , ttie resulting Ught woul lt
ad\'ertise to the country the kind .. Qf
Republican liberlll<'Onstrvallve split it\&t
has plagued the Democrats for yearf.
r--· --------............. _____ ._....., __ _,, .. _ , ......
Car Sales Dip
DETROIT (UPI) -Tbe ...
tioft'1 blc UU'ffl aut.cmUen
rtparl aUgbUy lower 'aaie. of
new can durlnc the mlddle 10
d•y• of JUJlt, ~ with
reconl lllto dllrln& the ._
period lut year.
5alea totlled 1$1,111 .....
pored with •·• clurln( the June ll-JO, 11111.
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE ,.,_
CEl.TIFICATll 01' IUSINllSS
l'ICTITIOUI NA.Mil
Tr. vndenlen9d -ettTlfW .... b _. ductllll 1 111,n.l..nl 11 J1! E.1111'1 St., C~I•
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Sl!ltVlCI 1fllll ftlllf Mkl !Inn k <--'
or ,,.. ,.,......... --· ..,_ ,._ 111 full 1IMI ~ "' rftJckncl 11 II tot ... ; NILA CASULAS, J1J I!. llfll. C.M.
D111d ,_ ll, lHt
Niii C-11•
Sllll' of C1lttomll o .. nee CoullfW: On J11r11 lf, lKf, bd11<• m•. 1 "'IOl•rv f'ulllle In 1M for l.lld St1i., 1>1rll>t\lll¥ IP-
-nod NILA CASUl..AS ~ IO me ta bl Ille 1>1roon wlloH Mml I$ MlbKrlbttl
ta 1111 wtll'lln '"'""""""' 11111 1cknow1Ht· ltd l~I l•KUfed 11'9 H""'·
{OFFICIAL Sl!All
Mlr'J K. M..,ry
Nol1ry f'utillc • C11llorn!1
f'rl11eto11 Offkl 1n o,.,..., Cout1f\I
MW Commlnlon E1t11lrt1
NoY, 2.c. lm
"Wllllled Or1nee C.0..1 D1llY 1"11ot, J.-lP, 1f Ind Jllf\I 1. I, lflff 11J.5.ff
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
'
ly Phil "' .........
be'•
Clore Vote Seen
•
Faces House est ·
WASHINGTON (AP) Dtmocrtllc ty.
President NWll1'1 IUl'IH ... Rop.-. A. Vlllik, (!).
tension bill ii apparently set Ohio), the blll and he
k>r Its lint Houoe floor tat hta wrl to 111 -
Wednesday with both a1dea Democra t tbt m.-.
saying any wte wUI bedooe. mutt be to force quicker
The DtmocraUe leadenhlp action tai: reform:
made llnll cbecltl Monday middle lfOO!ld,
and .......S to be qtlsfled the Vanlk and ha added In
House Rules Committee would h1I "1 hope that you
vote the bill out on a .. cloled wW tbll effort to pro.
rule" buls, whlch mtana a vlde ar mandate."
straight yes or no vote "1th. T bill wJU pus, said
no amendment& t<JDlldeiod, Rep W. Byrnes, (R·
Nixon Looks
At Traffic
-From Air
Surtax o pp o n en t s con-W1I t "we It.ill will have
template challtnCinl the to IO or 90 Demacrati< WASHINGTON (UPI)
"ckl&ed rule," but they hive v 1 do not believe the PreOltnt Nlxoo toot a U.mln·
been p<rttln( their m 1 I n aUc l...Senhlp would ute belloopter ride ~ Wub-
emphuis on defeating the ineffective u not to pro-ington's rush-hour traffic to-
musure. EarUer, House tbolel0or90votu." liberals b a d attempted to , 1...Slng GOP llouae day and e>preSSed sympothy
persuade the committee· to , pqged RepubUcan far ft plight of the commu.
allow a vote on ezteftdna the at 120 to lll votet -ter.
DAI~~ PILOT f;
TV Impossible?
Studio Sues Barbara Bain.
LOS ANGELES (UPl)-Ac-
U-Barbara Bail> -aued f« tll,l,000 f~ bt9'ch of coo-
traot -Y 10< bet failure
to rtpOrt for work on the
telev!sion 1 fJ r I es "Mission:
ljl>)lOIBlble,". lo< which she
won 1n Emmy award.
Parom-Televl1lon IOURf>t
dam•I" that coold tObl
more tllan $l00,000 •nd re·
quated Miss Bain be enjoined
from working for anyone else
unUI May, 1971. MW Bain was working un·
der a five-year contract, of
which lhe had fulftlled three
years. ~ husband and ~
llat In the aerteo, Martin
Landau, was dropped from
the show when he and Para-
mount could not agree on
cortract terms.
FACING SUIT
Barb•r• Bain
'lbe suit agaimt Miss Bain
sough( $12,000 damages for
eact; segment she missed next
1euon and $11 ,500 for each
eegment she did not appear in·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;, during the 197~71 s e a a o n.1~
Tvmrty-six episodes are filmed
each year. LET'S BE FRIENDLY
Senators Say Laird
'Altered' ABM Need
income tu surcharge for 1aa thirds of &be GOP Home "I'm glad we don't have to
than a year. berlhlp. HI.I Democratic drlvt to wtirk," the President
The Nixon propoall, en-lllllOUllt to I bar< ma· llid u Marine 0.,,. I, the
dorsed by a split committee ity of House Democrats. presidential clJnnw', dellv-
vote, would CCl'IUnue the tu 1 ·bill bu· the endonement "'Yr"" 10 perce.nt for six months the Dtmocritlc Jeaderlhlp. ered him back to the south
fiye percent for 1ootbe.r · Byrnes voiced the. bulc ad-llwn of the White House.
months. 1be tu n:plrea Ju mlnlstraUon ariument for the Tr~rtatlon Secretary
Miss B1in won the Emmy
for the best actres3 In a dra·
matk: terles.
Thailand Seeks
Viet Volunteers
If you have new netgbbon
or know ot anyone movtna:
to our area. please tell us
10 that we may extend a
friendly welcome and help
them to beeome acquainted
in their nll'W' sUtToundlnp.
WASHINGTON (AP)
Senate critics of Pltiident
Nixon's Safeguard -m i 1 1 i 1 e
de£ense program c I a i m
Defense Secretary Mel\'in R.
Laird has redefined in mid·
controversy the Soviets' first·
strike nuclear capability in an
attempt to support the ad·
ministraUon position.
Sens. J. W. F\llbright and
Albert Gore made the charges
following Laird's joint ap-
pearance Monday with CIA
Director Richard H e I m s
before a closed session of the
Senate Foreign R e I a t i o n 1
Committee.
Laird and Helms were call-
ed to testify in the wake of
Safeguard ~ritics' claims that
the Penlagon and CIA had
conflicting vii!ws on Soviet
missile intentions.
Fulbright, the A r k a n 1 a s
Democrat who heads the com·
mittee, and Gore (D-Tenn .),
said they fell the meaning or
"first strike capability" had
been completely changed by
Laird·s Monday testimony.
Laird now applies the term
to Soviet potential for knock-
ing out American Minutemen
sites with the new powerful
SS9 rocket, the &oaton oald,
without considering United
States Polaris submarines.
FuJbright said he h a d
always thought the term
meant "the capacity t o 30 un1ess extended. propoul, uylna: the surtax is John A. olpe, who eccompan·
destroy the retaliatory capaci· U the effOrt lo delelt the necessary to -...M ln!laUon. ied the President, told report.
I r t
...,.. ..., alter the IUght that Nixon Y o your opponen -• amendment rule falla, "We need to mobUlze an our planoed BANGKOK ,(AP). -Pr'-e
knock l bl
.. to present lo Con-....
"If thou
1
ow.h ponents then must wor efforts to stop the lncreued gress within the next two Minister "nlarlom K1ttlkachom
e enn as no meaning defeat the measure cOll ol. living. weeks 1 public transportation called for more a r m y
other than a par l i c u I a r Passage depends 00 d "It is a psycbolasical fac· blH to "iOcnase subimnUallv volunteers today to serve with
So. Coast Visitor
494-0579
Harbor Vishor
weapon, then it would seem Republican support p a tor," Byroe.s Aid, ".inOaUon the~ for rapkl tnnsft the Thal contingent in South 494.936"
thd.• 1Jus~~~~on for ABM _i~e~nerous~~~·~u~·ce:_~o1'-/.~e~f:eed~s~on~itse~l~l.~"~-~~~-'~ystems~~~-·:__~~~~~~_:v~1~etnam~~·~~~~~~_!l~!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!ii'!!!!'!!!!! 1sso ves, U\lle said. 1•
F u'!'b r1 g h t said the
secretary's testimony showed
less of a threat to the United
States from the Soviet Union
than was indicated in Laird's
first appearance and "less of
a reason than ever before" to
proceed with tbe ABM.
Suit Perils
Hartford,
ITI Merger
WASHING TON (AP) -The
JU!tice Department threat.ens
an anUtrust suit if lnteml-
Uonal Telephone .. Tel-Corp. and Hartford -Flu
Insur~ Co. go ahead wMh
their planned $6 b 1111 o n
mercer.
But rrr •lid Mondly It
"lntendl to move forw1rd with
the merger o( the companies
depending on the outcome of
the vote of the atockholders"
of the two linnl.
I Se_e1 y Today's
Wanl Ads
• Campn1 take ldvanta&t
of thla equipment, propant "'OW'· cookq ldt al1d, lan-
tern.
e FeelilW tired. nut down !
~ up, work out and
makt the tetne wtth u
ahnolt new .. 1 of dtluu
bar beDa.
" ' ti
•
" I
. >
' '
"
's C
•
A finer bunch of troopen you'll
never meet. But right here
in Central and Southern
California the Cub Scouts could
be threatened.
By dirt!
And a Cub Scout deserves
a clean uniform, right!
At any price.
Well, what is the price l
A penny.
•
cou •
A penny buys enough electricity
to wash and dry one Cub Scout
uniform. That's based on
both washing and dryin_g a load
of uniforms for a den of eight.
Q.uite a bargain, isn't it?
Or talce your TV set. Electricity
runa it for less than 1-an hour.
Or your automatic dishwasher .
Less than 2J a load.
Or an electric hair dryer.
Less than 1¢ an hour.
In fact, elect ricity in Edison areas
costs the average family less per
kilowatt-hour today than it did
10 ... 20 ... even 30 yean a_go.
Practically everyone today
is using much more electricity-
more lCilowatvhoun-than
ever before, and it's still one of
your biggest bargains.
Scout's honor. sCaE Southern California Edison
AN lQlH\L Of'f'Ol.TUNlT1' lMl'LOYll
.; . \
•
.. • . ' , • r ..
. . -=c---· --. ~. . . ·-
I I DAR,'Y PllAn' :~ITO!"L . PAGE I --' • :Folly of
. ' tt•a 111UDk:l1* budt« time and pressures are on -,._from Inflation-hurt lalrpayen IO.bold thi line
"llinll bJper wes on the one hand, and from lbose
wbo want more and better coonty and municipal Hrvi-
.,.,. on the olher.
'lbe prime gool ol. officials In carrying out thel r
alewardsblp ol. public afialra u, or should be, to awld
poolponing oeeded• capiW improvementJ or efllcient
inalnlenance' ol. eli•tlnt-ifacilitles.
Banta Ane Is 8 classic example Of the lolly ot put•
ling th ... things' Off, year alter yesr. Included in this
general· neglect have been fire stations, streets, libra•
rles, perks and other publlc building• and services.
The county seat has boasted that ii.! .total tax rate
bu been the lowest In the county for several years.
Tbls has been a period of the wildest Inflation in many
years. Reducing taxes while neglecting city facilities
has been penny wise, pound foolish . . ·
Now Santa Ana ls forced to pay for its past folly at
far hlgher cost than would have been the case had needs
'been met year by year. The city manager, alter 17 years
of calling !or tu rate decreases, is llnelly up against
asking ·fo< a 21kent increase to '1.40per •100 of assessed
valuation, a 23 percent boost.
5anta Ane was already in deep trouble over !ts neg·
lect of schools to the point where many of them no l011g·
er meet state safety standards. Now it ls faced with a
massive need for street repair, sewer mending and a
hoot of olher costly. improvements all at once.
City fathers .on the Orange Coast have the lesson of
Santa Ana before them. The prudent ones know that
po«porllng Ill• meeting of genuine municipal needs will
only end In higher costs for taxpayers. Their drive, in
fact, &tiould be to anticij>ate future needs where possible
and meet them. at today's prices, tor next year's costs
are sure. to be higher.
This Isn't to suggest that an orgy of spending is in
onler, "to beat 1971).71 prices." II does mean that to-
day'• clearly visible basic municipal needs should be
met today and not put oH-m matter what pressur1&
Off
1&r1 applied to'the • 'l1se Sanla AM .'inanqer; llc1'ed ol.t'llle .
quencts of a put\ln . .<po11ey wbtll •· rlftlHld -:;.
field and•askod for a up tu-IJICraaH:
-A tletertoraUon . 'ractftlled 1w lilcrea!'ln.I· trof· fie colllflStlOD. . • "(. • '
-1'1ie spread ol j>hy~ bll(bt and decay ol. llrUC. turee '.' · ,. .,
' 'I • , -'.An exodua ol U.. ,...... aflluent citizens to IDol'.e
desirable llYing .area•.. ·: , . · ·
-An lnCreaM in govewnent res~bllltles, C..js
and Inefficiency accompmtd by a cornspondln1 de-
crease tn-revenue1 needed ~et:th•ff incr•lln& com-
munity needs. ·
Orange Coast recldmu, j(.tllay would protect their
Investment, Mil want no .~ tbla petttm.
For a Needed\Dialogue
A measure urging the Unlv•1:ol California Board
of Regenu to form a joillt tlUd ~ commitlee
is now before the 1tate Senate, hli i-••ed the Auem·
bly. • •
A11emblyman Robert Badha".'(Jl..Ne.wport' Beach)
opposed the plan, ...-.ndlnl it iJ 1a1!1te4;.t'. .
The naed for . studen~Regenta\~ has, never
been more sell-evident, not only ·ln•.-...ctfon with the
recent ·Berkeley · "people:s park" ·O\l!IOde bu( In moot
other UC student vs. "The Establl~" confronta·
lions since 111114. . •
Badham. was short-sighted In opiicoelnl:' a concilla•
tory move · many never thc>iJglit they ,1"uJd '" ·come
from the. Legislature. The Aasembly Cll"•tctly iliclcled
there is. much to gain, nothing to lose by ~r Regents
-students communication. _ ·
The'stnate should pass the meeaw-.. 1/14 GoVemor
Reagan •tiould sign It. It prob<lbly re~only an
expreslioitol &ood will, but students and - --<a lboulcl \VelCOmttihis. .. . ·
'
'T1ii6 time iM:fVfl gone too far! Applying the '
Conatitution to COntJresa!'
--··{
Bra%ilians in Dark on R~kfl'• Visit PJ>li&ical
Saiirists
Ta~~ a Vote
Rate of .. Change
Frightens Us They See Only Public Side
SAO PAULO, Brazil -There are two
aides to the Rockefeller visit here -the
public llde IDd the private side-ond the
pity ls that the Brazilians see only the
tint.
The public slde-tbe side they see-is
Insulting, though, of course, they would
not dare to say so. But if it is possible for
an American to imagine the following
clrcumstanoes, it is possible to imagine
how Brullians feel.
Imagine then that the Joint Chiefs of
Staff took over the United States a few
)'ean ago ind that PoliUcal leaders of
both parties bave,been banished or jailed.
Imagine lurther that the ruling ..-11s, ln a fit of pique beoause c.cmcrea refused to censure a senator
who crftidzed the ormy, summuily cJos.
eel down the Senate 'and the Hoose lut
December and sent the members home.
IMAGINE THAT all newspapers are
under tight censorship and that well·
known ~ liberal and con-
aervaUve-are in jail.
Then try to Imagine that last week the
police -In preparation for the visit of a
dlstinguisbed f.,.lgner-closed down the
leading university, picking up t ,000 1tu·
dent leaders and faculty members and
,.nding them to prilon for indefinite
terms. '
Now come1 the distinguished foreigner,
cbeuful, bounding, full of apparent good
will for the generals who publicize his
visit u though be had brought with bim
the decent opinion of all mankind.
Publicly, this ls what the Rockefeller
mission means to Brazilians, and It ls aad
that the private meaning may not be
known here for some time to come.
PRIVATELY, Rockefeller Informed
llmil's president, Gett. Costa E. Silva,
that he ought to restore lb• Congr..,,
bold elections, reopen the uolvenlly and
1top the terror against lludents.
111e ....,.a1 tried to 11eer the .,,,..
venation lnto kllow1Uage, crop yleldl,
gross national product and the bllance ol
payments, but Rockefeller lluck to his
subjects, which were not on the 1~al'1
agenda.
Whether tht New York governor'• •d·
vice will be heeded remains to be Rtll.
Al least the rulln& clique bu -made aware that the symbol of approval which
Rockefeller wu to repraent ll u empty
a1 their capital dty -1 monument to
democracy now turned into a gbolt town.
Sinet the general& aent Congress home,
the broad boulevards of Brasilia are
silent and the city k>okl like a deserted
movie set.
IN SAO PAULO, too, the atmosphere is
silent and uptight. Members o f
Rockefeller's entourage tried -to arrance
a meeting with 1tudent.s whom they had
known in other years. When the ltudents
refused, an emilwy was aent to plead
wtlh them. The word that came back wu
de!inlttve :'"What else could we tell you
except that we are afraid to meet with
you?"
Rockefeller, of course, ii an old '·LaUn
hand and he ts fully aware of bt1 litua-
tion. Hi11, after all, Js a fKt-flndinC
mission for President Nixon and not an
occa1ton for public Jectum to LaUn
government.. ~Med at prus canf·
erencea here, he ltick11 to the aub)ectc on
the agenda of the generala.
HE DID, AT LEAST, nneue Clll of tbl
o. -·~ e
-rt;<-.. ~ "7'
'Se lltll'a lllir tlilr .. 1119 ...,r .
moro poos 1tlempls to Involve hll1l
favorably wlth·the milltuy 1overnmtnt.
The local pnerala 11 the Ministry of Wor
srrll!ied to 1word -ol their hlflhesl honors to Gen. llobert l'ortu, ·lormorly
the U.S. COl11l1W1der In thete plrll, wbo
is travellnc with the' Rockefeller miulon.
Th9 tried to ••• Rockefeller al 'the
~mony for the prestict It would atve
tbmt.
But the 1ovemor, "ho has sllyed
ollo&t In New York pol!Uct throOP -e aatl< footwork for II yeoro, knew haw to
sidestep .this -He urfvod·Ju!l·aa. the
ceremony wu endinc and promptly mov·
eel on to bla nest 111Hllnl wlthoilt Jofnlnl
the group ucl'wlthout Ill)' pfctum.
~portm· coverl!ll . the -.11oe.
ceremony nolod that the Americu FlOI
WU Upoide down •ln the lnlmtailclell
symbol for -For the Unltld. Slalel In thl1 'port ol the world, lt may
hove been the .-accur•te symbol of
all.
Namath and the Gamblers
Savants 'who read behind the lines In
the sporting pages are well aware cf
what ink robbery is.
This is a form of acUvity perpetrated
on the press, and the other media; by
prolesslonal sporls, and the Dacts ther ..
In.
Right in the mtddle of the football
eeuon. when people u 8 whole have
almolt forgotten what baseball 11 like.
there comes some stuMing baseball
yarn, like a big trade.
The yam runs its course in a couple of
days, aod people are reminded in the cold
montbl of the crack of ball against bal
Jt'• mostly harmless stuff. like most of
the stuff in the aporll pages.
FOOTBALt HAD Its turn a few weeks
ago when the 1ports pages and the front
pace1 gave ua: the implausible new1 that
. .
Joe Namath, the fabulOUI quarterbltck of
the New York Jets. .was "quittlnc" foot·
ball rather than dlspore ol bis btltmt ln
a New York bar.
V.'e had photos of Joe hanaing hi1 head
as he told of Ult pro football com·
miMioner'1 claim that his joint . is a
hangout for "certain undesirables."
The pro ·football commtalonet ls a
grandiose tiUe now held by Mr. Ptte
Rozelle, who&e function in life is to 1ct 111
a press agent for ·the various: club
,owners.
In terms of box-office, Mr. Rozelle la
nothing. Jn lbe 111.mt terms Mr. Namath
is a great deal, not only to his team but
to the game in general.
JOE, WHO lS II, knows what pretty
girls are made of, and tor, Hts com·
blnation of aeliness and 1kill has won a
tbree·year cootract with the Jets, which
11 believed to rtward him with 1 total tt
at leut $SOO,OOO through the ll'nl 1tuon.
()( COW'M, Joe Namath isn't some to
quit pro football. If onybody q\111.1 "" It
fired, It wlll be the COlftD1lllloner
blntsell. '
EvttY once In 1 while pr-Ollll
aporta tries to 1et the public to toke K
oertoooly.
Almoel alwoya, thete •ttempla end lo
dlwtor,
Mr. llooelle toot the ha'l' mor•I nne
punued with more 1UCCt11 m the 1m·1
by b11tblll commlulonet KentSaw M.
LlndiJ. He came out ol the Incident look·
I
--~ ---- ---~--'---
inl' lul moral~than naive.
IF Mii. ROZELLE knows of 1 blr In
New York Clty, or anywhere else, that
dou not .live some 1tmblen ''han&lng
......S" In It, 1 lhoulclllk• to be ln!onnod
ct.the place.
Gemblen an ro bar• as. port is te
blanl. Tbey enliven lhedolnt, lflld they
are uaually pretty Pel 1pendm.
I! pmblen-.re to beioimd·ln all hers,
then cambler1 are In bars in large
number• when pro football players ~
aAOClated with the bm. The true
1amblfr Is more inttrested in lbe
number 61 drinb of Johnnie Walker Red
Libel that Joe drink the night before a
1ame, and which dolly he ii belnC 1ttn
with, than with the learned pre-came
lucubrationl 'Of coache1 . and ip01tS
wr.itera. He .want. to know the action. Jf
be can observe his hero dol1111 ltla thin(,
he II surely 1olnc to like the opportunity.
Dear
• Gloomy
GWJ:
~T. A. R.
TMI...,....._....,.. ...... ... ........... " -........... ... ........... ~ ... ~· .. ·
' •
-Tbt national tociety stiirtau opened an emergen-
U\ld an 1bnoopber< of
tJy 1COWlin1 Gravely
· praldent o{ the
_the HAion .to Order.
"Wt all why we're here,
ceetiemen," he .. \1nlat IOlllethini .
is done, tnd done ~' we shill nevu
1urvtve the nert f~)':euL
"Lord knows, ~·: been patient.
We've liven lbt new 'Aimhllstration four
month! now to devea.f odd .characters
1nd flamboyant perS01111Jllel, so that we
mieht subject them to eattr. and ridicule.
It has dismally failed' to meet its
responsibilities. '
"I ay that our only hope , stntlemen,"
he said without much hope, "ls to ccn·
Unue to ignore it and It mldlf. co away."
"I FEAR TIU.T'S impQaible," said
qlns Bumi Biker of the 'New York
Times, the rts)>'eled dun of,the iroup,
"for there 111 no new AdmintltratiOn. I
knew .because it has never appeared ln
my column." -
Thlnrs Just aee.m to be worse than they
uaed lo be.' In reality, they're much bet·
ter. in almost every area of our national
life. It's just the rate of change that
dizzies and frightens us.
When l began writing this column,
more than 25 years ago, the U.S. was
mentally a,leep, morally stunted, and
emotionally constipated: We were a
pullive, dully accepting citizenry, corny
and credulous aJmost beyond belief.
In the intervening .quarter-century, we
have grown up etlonnously -and. of
course, we trave experience:t t~ growing~
paJns that accompany the b1p through
adoletcence. But we abouldn't confuae the
procesa with the1 state.
TODAY, AS A nation, we are far more
sophi11Ueat.ed, knowledgable, concerned,
.oriented toward action, aware of power
structure.a arxl ·processes, less vulnerable
to·being pushed around by &e.1.r-serving In·
terests~ U that Isn't growth and bet·
Lennent, I don't know what is.
We an qu estioning all the old verities,
which 'i11 the beginning of wisdom (but
not, u so many yOWlg people seem to
. think, the end' of it} and we are learning
that a small and dedicated group can
make a big differtnce in communities,
c:burelte.s and collolges.
THESE ARE GOOD days·to be lived in,
not bad ones, and J have little sympathy
with people my age who · ye am
nost.alglcally for the time of our youth.
We were trivial and unlnfonntd, smug
and uncmctmu:I, while the great elemen-
tal forces of change were building up
erunmous charges of revolutionary elec-
tricity in the social atmosphere.
One need not approve everything that
Is going or. today -for all change breeds
its own excesses and perversions -to
appreciate that the motive-power behind
all. this_ churning activity is the de~ to
lead a fuller life,·to be more ·thi maSfer
of one's own fate, to reject autbcrity that
is not based on the realities of
humanhoocl, to make t r u e "in-
dividualism'' an ~ssential part of the
whole social fabric, and not just a slogan
of the market-place.
FOR WE ARE GOING through a
revolution as far-reaching and irnportai,t
as the first American Revolution -not in
the _18th Century sense of changing our
rulers, but in the 2oth Century sense of
changing the rules. We don't like the ball
game, which has come to belong to the
managers and umpires and associations
more than to the players (and it is no ac-
cident, by the way, that baseball player,s
ha ve become organi:r.ed.and dissident in)l
manner no one could have predicted .~
quarter-century ago).
What hurts today is the radical surgery
we are calling for ; but if it cuts out ttie
old malignancies, without killing the pi.
tient, hurrah!
To the •bock of all present, P.tr.t Baker'•
llatement · wu dJrput~ by a handsome
YOUlll hotheod nomed' Art Buchwald,
whole column, which appears thrice
w .. kty lo the Fayetteville, 11.0., . .ArfUI"
Leider, shows promlst.
"There la, too!" cried BuchwUd. "1
coiled the White HOUH juat lut wi!k to
ask the name of the Secreetarf' of
Arrlculture. They said they'd checlt,and
aet right back to me."
'Doesn't Anybody Care?'.
"And did they?" inquired Mr. Bl'ker.
"Well, no," admlttod Buchwald, "but, •
·"
'"YOU WERE connected to 1,
recoidtng," explained Mr. Baker. "lt
always says the same thing. Have you
eYer 1een a member of the new
Administration in the fitsb? Why have
they turned lhe li~ts oo at the Whlte
House, U not to mob people think that .
there'• IOl1MOH home?
0 No, l'm afrikl U..new Administration
has dt!covtnd · the · one sure way to
e~-Otn' barbS~and· arrows-by refUi-
in1 to Wsl How long can we continue wrum, three columns a wet:k about the
Generation Gap? We may as well I.brow
In· the towel."
"Wait!" shouted young Buchwald
amidst lhe 1loomy sighs. "Why can't we
matt up a President to fil1thttarget1ap
-·• coloriuJ, Oamboyant character we
could an attack?"
A1 ·inttr9Sl stirred, Buchwald waxed
entbu!lutlc with lb• UUberRJIC< of
yquUt "He could come from a funny
1tatt. Ull:e ·Tnas. And he could have a
wif• with a f\tnny name. Like Ladybug.
And he could have two tet:n-aged daugh·
ten who S.C Into funny romantl< ml1•·
Ups.• And he • •• " - -
A· GROWL ,.ept the room amid cries
of,. "Sacrlle8'1" and, "A damned 4".l~l"1 A· frltnd look tbe crestf11len Bucliwlld asi<le. •
.. You 'n too youna: to rtmembtr the &bod c*l ·d.-y1, Art," be said. "But we all.
know In our hearts the~ can never be
onolherllhhim."
. 'lbe .memben then rote, tean tn tbtir
eyes, to •tnc· "For He Was a Jolly Good-.-
retlow" and I motion WIS made to Id
up an employment bureau to help
po11t1c11 11um1s find honest work.
Tht vote wu 21 for honest work and JJ
hr"harHlrl.
To the Editor:
It his. been more than two weeks since
the tra'gic, unpr~voked killing. of Santa
Ana police . officer Nelson Alvin Sasscer,
24, of Garden Grpve,
Every day, morning and ·evening, 1
have cartfully rel!'.t the newspapers for a
report of some cttilian action 'protesting
th11 horrible and •nseless crime.
lf there has 'been a .full·page ad-
vertlserhent sponlOred and paid for by a
IJ"OUP or prolesaors on any university or
.college campus deploring thiil crime, I
'. ll~ve not seen jt,
~ 1 -NOR. HA-VE--TBEJtE been, to my
knowledge, any student p a r a d e 1 ,
dem?Mtrations, eit-lns, .oc~pat.ion of any
pu1:¥1c buildings or offices protesting
brutal tty to· a member of the police: force.
wtre any flap lowered •in memory of
fficv-Sasscer?
Here· was 1 man, with a young wife,
ho had served his country for four
.. \In the U.S. Navy; who-·was still . fnC his country II I Pollet officer ;
ho bod been -. "Rookie .Olllc:er of
Letttrs from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. T~t
right to cundeme letters to fit space
or tliminate libel U reserved. All let·
ters mmt ·include signature and m~l
ing address, but names will be with·
held on reque1t.
• '" the Year" In December, 1988, by tbe Sa.q-
ta Ana Benevolent Police Association and
the Santa Ana Kiwanis Club-and where
are the voices raised in his behalf?
ARE THE professors and students too
busy catching up for lost lime? Are peo-
ple In general too busy ? Doesn't anybody
care? Do we have a double standard of
interest for students and polict? "
MRS. G: A. BRl!ilN ..,,
~---..... ---~· B11 George _______ _;';:"~
A.S.
e YtlU for belna or.
ly, 1s a matter of.
wife should alw1ys
"' make sure the children ·leave the ... _,
room before she kicks you in the 1,
ribs. ..,.
• Dear George: '' ' . •' Since following your advice J'vt "'"'''
managed to reorgani~ my life hli·~· ~
such a fishion that I am no longefd, •
in debt, I make considerablfi,_"' '"
money, and find myseU exceedingly 1
popular with girls. '· · • THAmto•1li' ....... Dear Thanks : . •
IS THAT SO!I .
Hm. I'm going to have to sUni1\''
rtadfng this stulf. " , ,1
t
•
Bi
I ' I ' ! 'P I
I
I I
I A p I I part!°"' • '!:f/.1 1HOW1 I oil> :~\n1
1BANGJ
I telel'!!o
I monlli.
I jod
I bib l
I 0 dinar
1 cf1 Can
I J~ngt
I CATCH
'cJalmi
; pery Cl
; plug ot
THE
: How to
I that i
1 custom•
1 ''Why c
1 an inst
I asks. 1'
1 provert
1 explain
I does C
I before 1
'Garden
Late at
own clc
of sam
the poi
kindly.
with an
other tl"
lJME
one tt
farmer
'Zephyr
an ami
when b
kicked
.,Je[t him
·Very
REMA!
plicable
·of old
stance,
•peace n
·along 1
were tc
'Unions
"·Re
' 1 LOS J
three d•
that res
)ail.ings,
~ur1es a proper!)
"tries fo-1(rols ar
'the enti:
~: Three
"Police c•
day ne1
'fu ll rep
'lienior ~
JiresentE
The <
Michael
~would .
fueasurE
tighten
issuing
Qf'rmit.
!'Tope
near De
FernanC
commur
maraud!
trees an
ed pers
swim mi:
campinE
land -
City C
:llea
" 0£1
SACR,
Gov. Ro
i day
ublic
d a
hhold
come ta
'"~I
'" .,.,, N
" ' ·hel~
Saft
1 l!pecl
I ll•1 potrft
SIM.P" fc I •m•n taJ r•fntbh
I ll blottl 0.
i •nnoth
I NotYotr ·
• eom bin ! 111• prob
brl1111: rt•
fofftltllf ,.....,_
, T1bkt1'".
•• d'lnet1 n.,..
t .. t .... ••e• A•J tb ... l Ir
C1) A• • t"'., th·• ... to.I ••• ,._ ,., .. '"' ,,.,.
' • .. Tiit{day, Jtlii~ 2( 14'1..q DAILY PfLDT 7
----.H"iidgef ---· , .. ,, ..... WOil•
MR.MuM ' .:IJqt•tte~· ~·
• 11J.\..
.. r 1-..
'
,
·-~TaiSlia
·. l
. 'Pla1 z r,,. • ~-l t
' . -~tJi1"1?
B'ibl D pp .t ., ....... ,. 'I •.
1 • . '' ~ '\ . . ·~~~~a · "
. 1 11 Capilclli~===~~~~~~
' . Q . •/.•·. • ·~'111 ' iUPI) -. e :' e ~ ~J':)\ : :· · .. ..c~·~~t 'l~liCa,~008~ I t ' ~ ... ~~)', J'<. ·., ··:;;~<v."), ; .··~~~ ~rilinorlt)I
I 'P rf ' · " · •'~ ,. ~,,. • l-1' Jl"l ·\hituh.l 'today I . . . ct ' 7 · '. ;r •. ' l ··JIOi!ml-their fhaj"rJl"nd Ill the : . e .. e ' ·, -~. '·i ·, ...... ~,:~: • • f ,~fs~w:·~ ~"~!.~ ,b,,~t~ of,
• ; . .,,1 • • /~ , , .~· Tlafl 1 SfJJate ·~.i{Vi 1b3s:rly
I lly I. M. BOYD" l 'Nl~CL~ ·-· l!ant ·t' ·Pll..e<r:. n-i, a ·~49 tllllUon
: .t :P·ZRfECTLY :pro-~fub' ~~.r wbo ~~ spe~;pi:ot:rnsn ·~~r.,··\llil<J
portioned roan, Jt's said, ma~e •.su~·oi one"# ~.t ~II~~-J~i-1~ !~an 1 sho~ weigh 28 ~nds for c~ri't re~t ·uie pert~-~Reagm:e or1g1n"I reqve I.· )
: e'vtfY ~oot Ql, IUl'JWght. 1 •• • iq ~• dirrertnr.. tocatiotl. ~Qut'i ~rol>tr Democrats ~tcr
1 HOW WN9 haa: ftt~ since whj"not '! "Usua~y becallS( liq ~16• fb~ ptObabJy wou ld 111·
I a~ ~e4her litUe gil'I' tr~ to expamt_bis:faCflltifi ~ • mt· on· lJlore scM&t . aid·an~
1 Lillian?' A:ilQ, ~· \ • ,. IN aDpeal to ,-nore ~ 1,~~-:-· mooey lot the EdlK:aUooa1 Op: 1 BAN<'~you ·~.&el a \ generation ," says a91 ~ J>O;l;luniU. Program (£;0f'l.
1 tele~~ed wtthin a ti. · Who has looked µito . ~ . '7e want to .rit u1, l)(lrne
i'
' "
t m~ wtiUilg peri od. onlY'· if. matter, "Almost . every . sue--meaping£ul 11~u1f, !>a~ t:iW<.''c:;
1 Y'09 '1Nt up a fT5(l'depos;t. •.• . cessfu l operator," ·be ~says,,. chairman George 7.L>nri•lr~_.h'~'~";'====~='~~~~;:;~:::~~~~ t DIJ> ·I FAD. to : tell you an "caters only to one age·gr00~ iD-.~0il ,.
r ordinarY seven-inch lead pen-As soon as he attetTipts l'l f!Ui. ·Ji~. slid.' ho"''ll.\tt, lhc:, t;.i•l,1·
I cll can· draW a fine .SS mi\is parents , he loses e'Verytrung~•· teosU(_~:f Lhe D!?nW>Cr19-f"'i . ~II :-.-·
1 JOng!· ' , ·A PBOFilsIONA.L CUSTOMBf\.SEll~t Q.' .: . not ~ .hold up progrc&.11 of Ullt 1 • ' •
1 c~-n;imlt ol o ct ci p u o,, "I gradual~ from !118". sClloo1 acrg<t by technlc•,1 doli>y< D ,,.~,.~ , Sa'. ,','-' Il"°. 1 claimi the one bait those -slip-the year 'Bei Mir Bist Ou" ·¥sem~y Spc.akc r llohf·rt T ll \.'-' 1.. n, . _1 ~ .Q.-ii
'pery critters can't.resist is a Schoen' was so ·f>oPuta"r . How pnagan (R-Tracy i, 11'dflll'<i . . . )
1 plug Of.ltobaeco.. old am I oow?'' A. About 50. , membe~ they rn uy h<ive Ill . At SF Siu ...... ,.
! THE PERFEC'I' WIFE _ Q "WHO . GETS THE ee l lh1s weekend to r•unplttu ., • ,. . ,..\
t H t be rf il 'ctt'E .RRIES( r . th ork9nthebud~t. ::V , ow ? a pe ~cL Y" .e -.. rom .e 'Be available al <in\i t1m,. • .. ...
1 that IS what a f~1nlne Ja~cse cherry'" treesllo,'~t at ny day," ht told hi" c:r;l~ \\' S'll"G~"N ·(All !._·
1 customer wants to "' know. WaShington, D.C.. A. league~ "You can c:xpt ·t t A • n 1 v '
1 "Why doesn't sotnebod~ write think those trees bear any ~ call~d into sess·o" . t ',.,.~ '"H!·!uctance· of the :<"o-<.~:[l?d 11tr 172·page report, by Ille
. \at ~·:ol Co1nnui:s.io11 nn !!JI•
\VASlflNCTON
Cnlifomia me in b ~ r ~ o
' &mgress reactt'tl {'{!)div t 1irtl~ r
l o Gov. Rnn.:ild ~aQ: i11's pn1
pos.ul for a 100 pt.•rrtint r .... d(r1 !
c1edil for a slate 1ncon1e ti\
1
lncrl'ase. ,
''Tt\a t'S n lot of fooli~hn l'"»,"
!i<1ld ijep. J:in•es C. C11r1aan, ;i I
Oem·ocrat on the Hnuse \\ :11 .;
and Meuns Con1n11llt't'. J
can 't be lieve he is S('·riou:s.1'
"I ··\\'ant the fc.101\' 11 t: '
spends !he money to cJllCt'I 1'
right in his o"'n back ~arc!.
bid Rep. James B. l'lt, :d
Hcpublican men1ber · of t1
fclh:ral tax-1vriu11g group. I
Hcagan IS proposi,rg a I r •
cent tax on gross iqeti1nc i•
ar1dll4>n to the pre s e n !
r.r:idua\C<J st;•!:.> incu1nf! Loi,\ I
Ile ijl)OOUl\Cl'il 1h:it ht• ~-. t
: ing Cal\forr.ia con,grl' .. nicn 1 I
sci' what 11\~\ c::n ~<1 ;1', ll
i::c!ring 1!1c Jcder:..I ~11111,
rnCn t to 111low !ht• ndtl,L·.11: ·I 1
ro x 11S a cr1·dit :11•.:1ip,t fl·t\•·r 1
Jll['bn1t· t:1x pa:. 1•1(·;>!~. I
"ll Sl'('!llS l1!:c :i !ll'\"l'
cln n,C{'rous preef'dl'r>I ·!11 )i • .• j
1· o ·n1 men t (' rl R.t'J (' 1
lt11\il1•!.t. 11.'l"i:l"\tll{' 11 .. '
' a" •••truction manual'" she fru1't. do they• , . Q. "HOW """""at t•ou•s '"d 'aa, ;',, 'J 1 -;t<ihlishn1<'n' to r es p u'n. d ...... · · · · · · · . .... · , "" C:1!.l~('i !lrat . l'rt'1cn llun l.lf I · l'1hff1rni a t\1n,..;rt -~l'•n;d
! asks. No need to. Chec.k ~~t MANY TO~S named N~on -"hie lr.gisl<itu re muiii pa~~ 11 r<ipir!'y to the ne'd for Vol . ltd Sh 1 .dr'e-:· 1 on. 1 1proverbs31 :1G-31.There1n1ts ~re U,tere ·1n -.the, .1.Jn1~ budgetbymidnightnext\t(Jri-ch:iigc·· i$·among uhsrll\'l'fi · 1 (rtce,ts e.nLtt ··_ut t "It 11 , tr! p•:! 1•1, fi•tlir:il
I explained clearly said woman Slates?" A. Know or only fou r. day, start or the nei\' {, c •. ! pro h!e ms le.ft in lhe: wa~ '!' 11"'-ttl. A Co!l:!ge·1n Cr1s1!'::'' n 11.,.cn1!1,, .. .t i.t t"i·' i,·, ,
1 does as rollows : Gets up In Nevada, New J er s e y , year. U1~turbance$ at~ f.ra1~1soo ·. ~!'. 1>n:par<>d _for tbe t:o_M· · Co!iecting !rri•·ral t:i\l'~ . nt
! before dawn to cook breakfast. Pennsylvania, and Texas. Before the sen:ite passCtl ii<; State College. says a govern-11us:.1on by \V1l11~m H. Orrick rcftiiichng In !hf' r.i!'!ll' 1, ;111 ,,it
'-Garden& ~ork:s hard all day. . lllD, D~ PERCENT.\.GE -. budget version. Sen. Raffdolph _ Jl!ent_re~ry, r~J.eased_t°"'1Y,.... • )J. ..... Snu .. fr.anl'.!!SCO :atlorncy ·relatimr tn pr.,gr1'ri 1:;," h<·
Late at rught, too. Sews her You d lhinlr. a gambler would Y. Collier. the finance com-a:1d fonner L. 1s. asds1st1a11t al· S(litL
own clothes. Even sells some be eager to win just as much mittee chainnan said he 11.rlll'Y genera an . lirmrr J!oli['l'l•I s .'l i rl C:l.!'r ir"
or same. if neces.sary. Helps Jnoney as he is willin~ to lose .. would~be willing i~ a tYi·o-hou r _7'.T(). IT't.<;.J_: ( '. J,•ru1v "~sista"t. 5.tlretury cf t!ht':1rl~ l~ i:; ··1,·•~:h " ,. k
the poor; Talks w~ly and But• that'!I pot . right. I.n negotiaUOO commit!(>(' tn tn· 1 l· i"" ~ rf t-i1ah:. . . ~,.h,t·1'11t1 1 ~h,.~e·• to' t,
kindly. And I)ever fools aroun4 Nevada. the average loss is _aert $3 million for the 1:01 • Orrick s~id h.1s report tlra\i·~ fr;~1 r.JI \;');Cs co!IL't!.-d 111 11~,·
with any flirtatious gentleman far higher than .the average program at the Linh ersily 1-r C E d • ri1° cvnclusw.iri~ h~I .roeu~~s. t'n '· ~t:!Ui in the · f11rm or , . .,r.., 1(· I·
other than her own husband. gain. Has to do with some sort California and the state col-~S~ 1 I~'-lltg· I le ll,if'tory~or, the ri i~ordcrs "1 · pJ"n-t~:i rM .itr~1nts und .1..,r;1:i.i,-•
UMER1€K LOVERS, hert's or psychological quirk co~-leges. . · ·~ . the ~.olfeM; ~ctii·ccn Oqto.~r · :{p~prj:ii:ion~ .. '"but it is :i ll
one that's pleasint: '•A mon to most or us. When· win-·• LOS ANt.ELF.S !C J>l 1 -Hr-O-u ncl April 1969. . th.,! to fct.'cral purp .l~»·..:."
..
Save sL40! Now the
Crow 1/2 gallon is ~sier
to P:et hold of. •
l'-01' G,.:1fc1rni.o 1n11 I
rvrul.1.1 ll~lf ~ .. J;on ,·01ne.~
IU )OU at lln tJ\~)·lo-pi~l..
\,1) rrk~ S.imt ~mu;Jlh,
11c1<'.trn Crow.
• f.irip·jui;: linndlc. Pc1i.;•t
fI•Jl for balar.ccJ {'01Jrini; ·n,,m firlit pour to l.~1.
• Compl\tl ~i:.-. No t:illcr
111:w a fifLh, but holJ~ fl lull
6-t ounle~
• p·1U· ·ill PllUt'tr. r ·[. •
r •1t.-u1g tClutrol .. -r1001b.
\.!;i1.k)l flO\V C\~·I)' l;a
rr;,,J. 1CCrow
1:2:,:~ ni;u!i: ii U:e nuriJ', most popular Bourbon. fanner once calle4 his cow ning, we take smaH p~o£its, , Thl~fi\'c-wcck-0ld hco?in~ to "The lc<1rliC"r .~l n~:f' :u•ri The r;e'1;::!1'1 propo~al. he :11J.
'Zephyr' • , • She ~med such and quit, but h~ng o n,· De llOl'"la Li Oil ~·, · .. :,· dct" nine w.•hethd°'ousted cor· !hr :.ludent stnkc _li:n·l" P!l''r .I. r1cd, \v riullt Opl'n up :1 ni·v. I
an amiable heptiyr • , • But desperately when losing. The ~ "111,1.c ".',' h,'. '.,subs. •d.c~l.. '.~nc\ .<11.". pri.'ll'iplr rir bl nr k itr:•nl-; v. IH 11 u"' ·11 th . oncrDr.Thom;.1s T.Noguchi ,1 l l''""'P'''atls '")' when be drew near •.• She big operalors ca . 1 s 11 c<1~ · .. • ""' ... "thi• '"'tabli•:hcd lil'Sten1 i~ I .
kicked off an ear .•. Which peculiarity "the h 1 d de n F 0 1' Si1·l1 a11 '! r:cts his job back m:<y l\Tilp up the report. · ~-= est<1b!i::;h thP pro!;'ran1 then\
•left him considerably dephyr." percentage." and they reckon loday. "But the deeply roolftl..pro-.•· raise t.hr fundtn r."' ' '===================== . Very pleasant. it into their calculations. WASHlNGTOi\ . !UP_ll ... l;ip~e\•er. ~ven if attorneys blems which underliile .Sa r'\ --. :
REMARKABLE how ap-Your questions and com· The Board or Immigration Ar-ror both sides finish Lht:ir suni-Francisco Stalc"s crisis _; •md
plicable still the observations me11ts a-re welcomed and peals has taken under ad-. , . which \llutiul' 1n:~n r of, the
of old Will Rogers. For in· will be used wherever pos· viSement Lhe govern1nent's re· niations before t~ays sc~5~on eountr)':s hii:hC~:1·01.1c.,\ion IQ-'
stance, it was his contention s·ible in "Checking ·Up." quest to deport r..1urur Bisilf~ . of !Q_c, County C11 11 S1•r\ ,cc :-.i11~uti;1ns -!' i; e l'I) P. i n to I'\·
•peace negotiators woulO romp Address mail to L. }.f. Sirhan. brother or Sen. Ro~ri .Cor;nJ1tissu~n. ~t· is expe cted to hll \ e: · · · · •
·along more speedily i! they Boyd, in care of the DAILY f'. ~i:nnedy"s assassin. s.ir~an, tqkc .'tbc...c:ommission anothe r ·· ArnOnli. those.'tre lOng·st~ '
were to fight it out in their PIWT, Box 1875, Newport a_ c1t12~n of Jordan. \va s con· monlh lo re=h a deci~iun. ding ~oc~a1 (lrld .economic irl-
'Union suits. Beach, Calif., 92663. v1eted 1n Los Angeles County , . .., . justices and 1heqait1cs and the
in 1966 of po~ssi ng1 mari· Noguc~1. l as. f1rc.d from lhr reluctance oJ~ .the so-c8Tiert
juana, but the court \lacatrd S3J ,!M-a;yc3r po!:tlt!st March c!i!ablilihmcnf'to r <'s.pondl '. R k F t • l R • t the conviction_ later. Al~orney aft~~ .~llfll.Y .,Adm~<alivc rapidly to 'ifJC need..; h.1r.' OC .es f, va .. f,0 Robert .A. · Ylflh•bc~. argued Officer 1.litdoo S. Holli,ger eh~i·::....M .,.Jidl the 'San • , ,, ,, ... _,. f()I:)· .the lmnugrat1on arRf .,,1 ,. 1 1 ·"~ ,.,...,.,
' , -' • .Natoralimtion Service'Afonday .pr~nl ... 111 •· is 0 ci""rges Francisco Stat!! trouble <\'&cie' ·M p c l ·.the court did not have th,e agaiost ith1;·42.,y,.e.a,r, .. old of the most di s tre ss in g ', ay rom pt ontro s a~l~ority to vacate the con-palhD.l~&ist lq .the ~~!d of ('pisoctes. in Amcric~I)~ higher:
that resulted in more than 100 mission "rubber stairiped" t~t
.~ailings, several hundred in-permit. He · said damage tO
~uries and at least $50,000 in prlvale proPertY and cost to
. .Property damage has Sparked the city ror .ext~a poli~ .work,
t ries £or tighter permits coll-rilight total as much as
1frols and an Investigation of $~,000. ., · • · \ D·.O .g
'lhe entire affair. The festival, billed a !l-
... Three members of the city's "Newport '69.'' drew more
~Police commission told a Mon-than 200.000 accor.ding to \
day news con£erence that a sponsor estimates and 120,000
lull report prepared by two by police estimate.
'senior police of£icials will be Police and festiv.al . pro-
'presented Wednesday. mote rs agreed that most
The coinmission president. vioJence resulted from gate·
Michael Kohn, said the group crashing by youths unwilling ,
:Would also r e c o m m e n d or unable to pay the $1 ad-
fueasures to the city council to mission fee. • ' .
tighten the requirements for
issuing a concert or festival
Jfrmit. Properly owners in the area,
near Devonshire Downs in San
Fernando Valley's Northridge
community, complained of
marauders raiding the fruit
trees and gardens, unauthoriz-
ed persons using apartment
swimm.ing pools and hippies
camping on any available or>en
land -including front lawns.
City Councilman Robert M.
:Reagan Hears ,,
Of Tax Support
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Gov . Ronald Reagen was told
i day that at least ~o
1j)ublican Senators back hJS
.; d a g a I n s t compulsory
thholding or the state in-
come tax.
Reagan Raps
Grape Strike
PALM SPRINGS (UPI) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan says the
ef£orts of the United Farm
W o r k e r s Organizing Com·
mittee to organize table grape.
pickers are . "immoral" and
"attempted blackmail.''
Reagan told a n e w s con·
rerence Monday that £arm
workers must be given the op-
portunity to pick tibeir leaders.
The governor said that
unless the rederaJ government
enacted legislation to regulate
the rann industry.~ believed
the state would <kl sp. He said
such laws · should "take .into
consideration the peculiarities
and seasonal aspects of the
table grape crop. ·
' ..
LOWEST 'F'lllC~ EVEll .F.01! SVLV NIA C@O • TV
CBll~H~ -TJ\e' Mini-Ma ll' cOm'bines min!mum-t"iz&d (t ·
portab.Hity with ma .. imum ' perfor.m .!l nce. Full 107 sq. ~
~· in. picl•Jr". W<'llr••t fii:i1s h .o n non~~ood cabinet with
conc.ealed carrylio1 ndJe. !Simil ar to illustration) ' .
95
. "
• Sy!Vania 's co lor bright 85 '! pictur~ t1Jbe has the sharpo!tt ~ol~r In the in·
; cjustcy!'T~~ P•e·Set Fine Tun ing (•nd ·ch,omo .AGC) r.e(!'Jern ~er tiie .pc ~
fect color sej'ting fQr ~ach ,chan nel,. saving yo!.I the trouble •ot tito~orne •
retuning ... It can be ~arrie·d anywh.ere in the home w i~kout the neod for
.color reballlncing' by .. a servicem~. An d if future sei-ViCing Is cY';r rcq~'r· '
'
s.
r '11 IJ2.Y lOi" ::DUi"J'adio.
-----.
\\''c 11 i.1y oi re tl1e·<,uly car~l<>ans Ill l11. d )Ull l;iu' tll.LLially hear. Because
)·011'Jl save eno uµ,li 1nonry 611 (111c lo Jxir tl ic radio for the car you buy.
\'ou see,'\ c oflC:1:
A highly interest: ng chccldQ;1 •ccow1t. Ji';_ Ii cc fol 1hc Jjfc of your
loan . Say your 111u1Jd1ly ~C'1 \ i(.:c c li:it;~e uo1Y d\'C1a·gc:-. $2. '\VJ1e11 it's noth-
j11g at ;ill, you"ll ~~I\ c -:}48 111 l\rO )'C~1r'i ; $i'2. i1 1 three years. For tl1at you
ca'n IJuy a 11i~c ra<liu.t>r a \c1) n:rc J;,uli1),
· ed, the chassis with plug-in ·transistor's makes in a cinch. 1Mod8BC::B3SW. · I ' • . ,•s shown •bove with AFC •nd sf•nd ava ilable •I $329 .95) '
Loa ns of little interest. Lo11 . Loll. Tl ta( s Ute on)y way lo describe·
our interest rat:cs. :\nd ){ill clou't J1a\C to IJc a f3m iliat face l'O get a deal. I· . Af'lcraU , makin:; Joyal <mtomrrs t pcrfccl .'i .angcrs m;r<lc us Lh c $9 00
•nillion bank we arc tocl"), ·
"
411 E. 1~th ST., COST~ MJ:SA t:1:~.!:ll!, 646-16$4 . ,
O&.ri.l f .f , Si\f, f ·t ..,,... • .. ...,,l Nfll;lf'tY I DIP~f(DAllU1'T ll~t ,r,.,,,;. ,),
•
••
So 110 ~na:ttcr '' lirtl1cr) Ott'' .111 l ;1 ..1
riadio or Yi hi1c \\ ulls or pll\\Cr ln J~t., J
fo r your HC \V car, if )'OU ):JCt a /01111
fron1 usyotl'll get a little l'tra. >-~;.
Lo~Low
Car
Loans
iJNlVERmY rAR• afTi i.t:02Z Culwr Drive, Irvine
HUNTU!<;T,a.~ DEACll orri~E: 169~2 <>old•n \\\Jo~ su .... t. Huntington Beacll ..
'·
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f
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• I llAll. y PILf1'
:Reagan Set £. EFor Fourth
' ~ At Knott's-i
I
I I
!
•
BUENA PARK -Governor
J.onald Reagan will bt the
featured speaker· at t h e
Independence Day Celebration
at Knott's Berry Farm hert.
1be celebration, SJKlnl!IOred
by the American Revival
c.ommlttee. will be held in
front of the full-scale replica
of Independence Hall.
The program will ~gin at
9:50 a.m., with the Marine
Corps band from Twentynine
Palms along with five area
high sc hool band s
participating.
William J. Teague, vice
president of Pepperdine
College and chairman of the
Independence Day pl~g
committee, will be the master
of ceremonies.
The third IMUal Richard
Henry Lee award will be
presented to a patriot of na·
ticmal prominence. The reci-
pient of this award Is not an-
nounced until the day of the
pmentaUon.
Actor Don DeFore win read
the poem, "I Am The Nation"
while the "Battle Hymn of the
Republic" is played by the
Marine Corps Band.
Mrs. J. Simon Fluor, past
chaplain of the California
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will read a
message from President
Richard Nixon and present to
Walter Knott a flag which has
been flown over the Capitol.
The first portion or the pro-
gram. "A Cavalcade of
Freedom" will feature a
nwnber of marching unils and
floats marking various na-
tional historical moments.
Climaxing the event at 11
a.m. will be the symbolic
ringing of the Llberty Bell to
coincide with the ringing of
the original bell in
~elphia.
DBATH NOTICES
DAVIDSON t::
1 ,,._, 1£. O•vldlOn. 20«! Vllt• Calon,
Ne-.rt &to.di. O•le of. *'elf!. June
21. WN1Yftl W wife, ~1191; ITIOll>er,
Mrs. LU 01vlihon, of $111 Ole110. Serv\cl:a, W""""411y, 11 AM, 119'nb·
Wt FVMnll H-. 1111 SUntet Cliff
llvd., Ocun 8eKh, C•llf, tmemi.111,
El CMfllno '""-1'11 Patti. Sen Oletlo.
F....itv ~Is ~ wlslllflll To .....ii•
-~cotrlrlbullof\t, .ie•w (Ofllrlb-1111 1rD He•r1 F11nd, Or-Counlt
He.rt •.oc:l111on, Sar.ti An•.
GROSS
2 Convicted
In Longest
County Trial
SANTA ANA -Two Los
Angeles County men have
been convicted or conspiracy.
forgery and grand theft in
what is believed to be the
longest Orange C o u n t y
Superior Court trial --Of its
kind.
A four-man, eight-woman
jury reached its verdicts after
three days of deliberations to
conclude • trial in which
testimony was first offered
April 1. They found Leonard
Auerbach, 32, of Arcadia. guil·
ty of conspiracy, grand theft
and forgery and Kenneth Hil·
ton. 33, of Les Angeles, guilt y
ot grand theft and forgery.
Both men were indicted by
the Orange County Grand Jury
a year ago after district at·
to r n e y • s investigators un·
covered a widespread
mortgage financing plan that
bilked many homeowners in
three Orange County com·
munilies of as much aS '4,000
each.
Auerbach and H i 1 t o n
solicited second trust deeds
for the proposed refinancing of
homes at fees ranging from 10
percent to 25 percent of the
Joan.
Judge Herbert Her I ands
ordered both men to return to
his court Ju1y 24 for sen·
tencing and probation hearing.
Both men could spend the next
25 years in state prison.
Villa Park
Dam Seeks
·U.S. Grant
County Fugitive
Found-in Jail
•
SANTA ANA -Orange
C o u n t y law enforcement
authorities have at last caught
up with Marion Dale Cook, the
fonner Norwalk barber whose
name went on the crime
docket when be kidnaped a
Costa Mesa youth and robbed
a Santa Ana bar all in the
same day.
'Ibey haven't known of his
whereabouts for the past year
and they blame Los Angeles
County Jail custodians for
that. It bad been arranged
that Cook, 39, be immediately
handed over to Orange County
officers after he served the
18<klay sentence he drew for
theft and joy riding.
But Cook, a man with a long
list of armed robberies to his
credit, was allowed to walk off
to freedom.
He was recaptured last
month in Phoenix and return-
ed to Orange County to f1ce
the Jong standing charges. His
arrest by Arizona law officers
followed a manhunt Jn whlcb
the elusive Cook wu reported
as having been Ileen in several
Western states.
Superior Court. J u d g e
Howard Cameron made sure
that everyone will know where
Cook is for the next 'few years
when he sentenced hlm to five
years to life in state prison on
armed robbery chara:es.
Cook pleaded guilty to the
$95 holdup of a La Palma bar.
But he has, officers claim,
carried out three armed roJ>.
beries in Orange County and
five more in Los Angeles
County since he served his last
jail term.
Cook's Los Angeles prison
time stemmed from his kidnap
or Jay Fletcher, a 17·year~ld
Costa Mesa youth who told of.
ficers that he was Cook's
unwilling passenger during a
night ride in which lbe
Norwalk man held up a bar.
Anned robbery and kidnap
counts were reduced to the.ft
and joy riding.
Trial Set for Mesan
Linked to Dead Boy
SANTA ANA -Superior
Court lrial dates have been set
for a Costa Mesa man who
figured in the life of a 15-year·
old boy, shot to death during a
camera store burglary four
months ago as he ran from
police.
Stephen D. Sampson, 26, of
2379 Santa Ana Ave. is char·
ged with receiving stolen pro-
perty -allegedly from the
dead boy -and child molest&•
tion involving a n o t h e r
youngster.
'11!.e sex charge is scheduled
for jury trial July 9, while
Sampson's stolen property
ease will be heard in the
courtroom Aug. 4, after re-
jection of motions f o r
dismissal of the charges.
Prosecutors have dropped
burglary charges involving the
de!endant, who was arrested
after being questioned in con·
nection with the death of
Stephen Stubblefield, of 20112
Kline Drive, santa A n a
Heights.
Investigators said he had an
electronics instrument believ·
ed stolen in a burglary at the
Orange County Fairgrounds a
year ago, one linked to the
Stubblefield boy.
A group o[ youths iacluding
Stubblefield frequented
Sampson's home, apparenUy
attracted by the many gadgets
and devices produced by the
defendant, described as an
electronics wizard.
' Every hour oo the hour!
Los Angeles & San Francisco!
Presenting the greatest flight schedule on earth
between 7 am and 8 pm! Both ways! More on weekends!
Stubblefield was r a t a I I Y Why worry about a reservation when PSA has over. wounded about m i d n i g h t March 15, when three police 1100 flights a week? Such an easy·to.remember
officers opened fire as he fled schedule you can carry it around in your head. ~~:3~~!::
from Corrigan's Cameras, 530 Why remember lowest fares? Or all jets? Or great
service to Oakland, San Jose, and Sacramento? Or that
kids under 12 fly PSA (with their parents) for half
fare? Stlll want a reservation? Just remember
to call your travel agent or whatsitsname airlines.
W, 19th St., after repeated lll-::::-r:atWl~ shouts to halt. t l1'\\W His mother, Mrs. Helen 11\~ttl ttJ'I ±========== Ellis, has filed a $252,000 l\UU
wrongful death claim naming
city, county arxl state
authorities, as a resuit of the
tragic killing.
llleb9ce9 h<1f11 Gtvl1. 1-'0n s.rlM•
1111'1 A .... , ~ e-ctl. SllNlved
by ~. M9x Or'lllhl dllllPlllf', Ea-
fotl .. It••..,, H1Mtl"'fton ltKll;
~111'1, """"*' Gntt, ol 8-lllm-1 ll'ld
ffY9 9tllftddtlldl'll'I, Slrvlcn, Wedftl5-Gorr, t PM, DllOlt I._. ~lie!. lfll&r· "*"'• 111-. Hiiis M<tm ..... I P•r1t. DJ. Ndlill by Dllll..-lrw. Mortu1ry,
Mi·ml.
C......,. (1'1~ Cllll~. Ate 11, DI
1011 S. M9weffft !rot.. Los Antoeles. °"" of dHl1'1\o Jiine 21. survived bv fllltlMnd, Jl<rlftclJ A:. ~l'llll""", Cot!e
"Mu; ~ ..... , N!MY M. Nifl'rllw1,
Nftl'Ol'f 1..0; .... Mri. £tlutleth A. l11!oef", Loia ~ _.., Jlllf\ A.
Ciiio!~, "'-t IMdl, 11'1(1 ... ,..,.
cJs. R. Chehnen. Rnery, tonl1M,
TUffd1t, I PM. Rtcivlem Mn•, Wfd. ..._.y, 10 AM, bQltl 11 O!lr L1d'Y Ollfftl
,of ,._... C1lholl'<: C,,urdl, Dlrtt"tt<I bv
kllr: N«t111rt. ll29 !;, C011t Hlth-
w1v, c_.. del Mar.
VILLA PARK -An ap-'
plication for a federal grant of
$7711,025 will be made for the
development eost.s of the pro-
posed Villa Park D a m
Regional Park, according to
county Parks Director Ken-
neth Sampson.
Orange County District At·
torney Cecil A. Hicks spent a 1~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:J week evaluating the case and
questioning principals, then
ruled the death justiliable
homicide under prescribed
police procedures.
ROSS
PM R. ROS$. Aee », ol U1U lrbt
i.-. Hunt11'19ion lead!. IC!lled Jn 1c-t!on I" v~. S\INIYed 11"1 Pl'lnfl,
Mr. 11'111 Ml'1. J•'""' R. 1!11u; •l•!e•, P1mN. S«vlcH, Thul'1day, 1 PM.
... F1mllv CCllonlll ........... 1 HO~.
HARGREAVES
Maudt H1f9f'HvH. 6'71 Chelt Cl"!e,
H\ll'lliftlllOn 89Cfl. S\lnl!Yld llV hUI•
Hrld, C. H. H..-. .... ..-. Slrvkn
• Thvndev, l PM, Ptttl F'lfftllt Colonl•I f .......-91 Home.
SCHECJ\
W""-G. kttlelt. "'" 1» of 2lllO • F1derll AW., 0>111 Mn1. l>9i1 ol
• ~"'· Ju,.. '11. s.,,....Jwd bt hulb1111ct,
Ht,.,.., G. ld'lwek1 •l•tw, Mn. Juenllt SIYf"f, Coiai. Mew. Stn1en, We't,,. ..
dlly, 1 PM, JrtfWll'ort H1ttor lu"!Mr111 Chu.rdl. w1!1111:1<1. J11MS l llll'W olfl-
ci.t\nv, tllll'f'!Mflt, """"" R"' Mt--ll'IOl'IM Park. onctld lit ltll Ir...,.
~y Mor1111tY, 110 lrotctwey, CO.II -·
ARBUCKLE I< WELSH
WestdlH Mortury
4%7 E. 17tll St, Costa Mesi -
The application is for
Federal Land and Water
Conservation Funds for fiscal
l!Jro.71.
'The 291.acre park is to be
located east of Villa Park
Dam and north of the existing
185-acre Irvine Park.
The land is being purchased
from the Irvine Company with
177 aeus at $1,036,391 and an
additional 114 acres for
$520,61S.
The combined parks -Villa
Dam and Irvine -will offer
an outdoor playground of
streams. lakes, camp and pic-
nic grounds, a zoo, golf course
and, possibly, a conference
center, Initi1I use is planned
by summer, 1970.
CHIEF RETIRES
'-11rk Stephenson
Police Chief
Due Honors
ANAHEIM -Retiring
Anaheim Police Chief Mark A.
Stephenson will be honored at
a dinner at the Anaheim
Convention Center July 19.
He is retiring after 40 years
of active service on the
Anaheim force .
Fonner Los Angeles Police BOAT BUFFS Chief Tom Roddin will be the
"'""•" Lockibiy ;, th• ot1ly guest speaker at the event,
f11ll -tim1 bo1ti119 10itor workint Tickets are on sate for the
011 111y 11ow1p1p1r i11 Or1t1t• $7.51)..a-plate dlnne~ at the Con·
Cou11ty. Hi1 1•cl111iv• cov1r191 vent.ion Center, the Anaheim
8 ,._ MORTIJ•DnNt of bo1ti119 111d y1chti119 ....... , Chamber of Commerce, police
tU.1•11 Anu:.o ii o d1ily f11t11r1 of th• DAILY h d II A h · Conn del Mar OR s.HSt PILOT. eadquarters an a na eun
Costa Men , ~D I-MU ll"i~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;g:;if~ir;e;s;l•;t;io;ns;.;;;;;;:;;tt;;;:I B~J0~re~~AY 11!.Youii"P*a.·o_i.iEM·=··:·***····· .. ··~. ·
111 Br'Oldway, Costa Meu «
LI 1-3m ; You want to NII IOnM Item :
: that you no longer nHd but 1•
DILDAY BROTllERS
BnU.rtn Vllley
Mort11111
1'1!11 Betel! Blvd.
Bandncto• Beach
111-7771
PActnC VIEW
111El\IORIAL PARX
Culot<ry e Mortur1
Cbpel
-... Pldfle vn Drl•e N~ -· Calllonila IU-tl•
PEE& FAMILY
COLDNIAL FUNEML
BOMB
'1W1 8tla An. --WID llORTUARY
• someone el.. can u.. for
: NOT OVER $ 50 • • : ,,,,,,.
~ I I I I I I ..
£ YOUR ANSWER: ~
: You ull THE DAILY PILOT, a1k for :
! Cl111lflecf Advertl1in9, and place 1 it . :
E PILOT i ~ PENNY I
£ PINCHER •
CLASSIFIED AD
AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE
·--4N-IJIS a.a1 1111 ...... •
3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS
AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I
DIAL NOW DIRECT!
• 1111'111'1 MOrnJAJIY
mMdolL "-.Y-.... .....
' . .
642 -5 67 '8
Hwepaid any • er
interest we'd be breaking
the law.
HUNTINGTON PARJC
(M•ln Olflot)
26SOZot Avmut
583-1541
BELL/MAYWOOD
E-2.SO Atl1111tk Avf:not 581.(1151 .
sruDIOC!TY
124:17.Vmtun Bl-rd.
7o6-4lSS
•
SAVINGS --.--
SOl1Tll CATE
4.240 Tweedy Blvd.
564-<551
WILSHIRE/ HIClil>.ND
11915 Wilthire Blvd.
938-3741
COSTA MESA
3310 Bristol Strftt ( •erost from South
CoutPllD)
!540-7591
----
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•
-------------~r.,-.-. ..,,, T .,,l' T•"O •-.-,~~~~_,,, • ..,,..,... ..... ,....,.....,... ..... .,..,,...,....,. ............. -... ______________________________ ..,. ___ ..,. __ ----""!'-='"'."--"'!'""""'"
I
•Rainbow~ Never
t, , Judy Ga,llatid .Brilliant B ut l nse
I .
~,-VEllNON llCO'M'
• HOLi.vWOOo . (VP!) -
rdy Garland In Ule ellhtr
as at the tpp of lhe rainbow
tll~ ~land of( Oz. or deep
deSoialr. But she was bev~r u1l:'~.--. 1 •
1 She was Jon el)', frightened. l
tlseCure. But there were al
iiany. Judy Gerlands Is there
!..eri_°t:lays ln JUdy Glrland'a
lfe. f
f" "Yod don't know what it's
1ike to stand on a stage a n d
lave a thousand people love ~," she said, "and then go
ome aod not have a single
rson to·love you. The gulf ls
great. It frightens me.''
She was born Ethel Frances
?;urnm in Grand Rapids, ~1inn., and there always was a
~it oC the little girl from the
JIDSU town about her. But she
possessed an inimitable quali-
lY with a song and an offbeat
sense ol humor that belied the
small town quality.
t Over many years of associa-
tion with Judy, l found her to
1be an insecure and brilliant
itirl·woman who found it dlf·
1licult to maintain a working
'•rrangtment with reality.
tercnce and needed to relax.
l .iudy's impetuosity and
'\.erve was illustrated in an ~necdote she frequently told
'.hie. One lonely day she felt
f::BS wasn't paying her enough
for her television show. She
found a qukk solution.
j "I picked up the telephone
•Jnd called the White House,"
judy related. "I adored Presi-
dent Kennedy and made ap-
pearances for his election.
When 1 told him my problem,
tie advised me to ask for more
tnoney.
1 "When I asked him how I
t:ould repay him, the President
Said he was involved at that
Very moment in a vital con-
tcrence and needed to relax.
J-le asked me to sing 'Over the
,Rainbow.' So I did and he
thanked me and told me to
fall whenever he could be of
pelp.''
A sa ving grace dur·
Ing Judy's 47 years was her
,::apacity for self deprecation.
She enjoyed recalling. rueful·
Jy, the torture she endured to
play Dorothy in "The Wliard
of Oz."
"They wanted S h I r I e y
Temple for the role," Judy
once lo!d me. "But they had
to settle for me and tried to
make me look as much llke
Shirley as possible.
"I was fat, had crooked
teeth, straight and black hair
and the wrong kind of nose. So
they made me wear a corset,
a wig, capped my teeth and
put horrible things in my nose
to turn up like Shirley's. Mak·
ing that picture was almost
tile end of me."
In recent years, Judy had
undergone a tremendous
change in appearance. She
weighed less than 100 pounds
and was virtually terrified o!
being alone.
She was a lonely figure.
however, who spent the nights
telephoning friends just to
talk. On more than one oc·
casion she would call me in
the predawn hours f r 0 m
wherever she. happentd to be
in the world, explaining "1
just want somebody to ·talk
to."
Judy longed to work -In
movies, on stage a n d
television. But the essential in.
troversion caused her endless
pain.
She frequently entertained
fortified by alcohol or tran-
quilizer!!.
She lost many engagements
toward the end by failing to
meet curtain calls. On other
oceasions, Judy would march
on stage filled with confidence
!'OUT OF THIS WORLD" i sa. Aiuo...i o-,. eo ..
·ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
A~ULTS $1.75-JUNIOU $1,oo.;.cttlLDUH W1M1er 12 RU
Cross word Puzzle
ACROSS
] Mineral springs
5 Cicatrix
'1 Strpprd off
l-4 ''··-and tush!" 15 Excellent:
2 words
"16 Stir up
emotional ly:
Obs.
17 Canadl<m
province: Abbr .
i18 Facts 119 ltallan4
born
act1esS
20 Not h!mm ed
in
22 Irish
cou nty 2~ Thoro119hfarrs.
126 -Panthrrs
27 Gibbon. za Caused to
29 1~lic1r
JZ State of suffrrlng
13!1 TV program: 2 words
!J 7 The --of March JB Canin e
39 Approached
40 Brach
43 Ore9on lakr 45 Pitch
46 Grredy
' ' .
-47 Ull!l)lrt's
decisloa
48 Weight 11llowancr
4 9 Mark ing al
ril.ndom
Yestrrday's Putzle-SolY!d!
53 Gear
57T IUeof
courtesy 58 Hitter of 61
home runs
59 Torpor
61 Underdone
&2 Having much
In common
63 Al thr pealc 64 Noun ending 65Fix lna
diffe rent
poslllon
6!1 Made 1 loan
67 L!gal paprr
DOWN
11 Frmh1i11e
name 12. At any
tlmr
13 Rrlusr to
approve
21 Prrlod or
tlmr
l Prepares ?3 Measu rt
for 1 fight 25 Strain
2 Master martnrr 28 Twlstrd
J US pionerr 29 Pronoun
in the China JO Hab ltit
Trade Jl Kind or
4 Braien container
5 Downcast )2 Haze
6 Garments 33 Fln1I 7 Opposrd product or a Comr back reason
into vie • )4 Bum
9 A.rust's 36 l ldely
accrssory sep1r1ltd
10 Al tht' point 31 lnvolvlng
of death: c1rrful
Archaic Judgment
10
and totally cap dleooe.
Btlore beln( to eeU
her quarter-mil on d o 11 a r
home In Brent" • Judy uJed
to pact her llvln1 room listen·
ing to her own concert ln
Carnegie Hall.
Not long ago she told me,
''Up on that staae Is the only
time that l'm truly alive on
my Q\tn. Atter I walked Into
the win,s, I felt 1 died a lltUe
blt ...
Judy could not comprehend
her myrtad fans forgettlng
her. She could not understand
public fickleness and m!Jund·
erstood it for hosUllty for her.
She often thought lhere was a
conspirJCy in show business lo
blacklist her from nlm.s and
tele1'l!lon. That's why she
preferred. p e r s o n a I al>"
pearances.
"Stand.Ina: on tnat stage to
the applause and love of an
audience Is like taking 1,900
wakeup pills," she used to say.
"It's the adrenaUn glands, an
electric charge -everythlng
rolled ln_to one."
Judy was a hypochondriac
who frequenUy called doctors
when she suspected she was
suffering from a heart attack
or another calamitous disease.
She did have a strong con-
stitution and overcame a
serious I i v e r ailment more
than 10 years ago.
She liked to joke about her
marriages and the tragic:
ch.ildhood she had as a
performer, often wishing she
had grown up In her naUve
town ot Grand Rapids, Minn.
She spoke well of her father
whom she adored but who was
overshadowed by the stage
mottler who pushed Judy to
stardom.
"l don't mind telling people
I used lo think of my mother
as an old witch,'' Judy 1ai~
one late night as she cb;'ank
most of a bottle of vodka.
"And I have a feeling she's
flying around here somewhere
listening lo every word I'm
eaylng."
Judy Garland always found
it easier to laugh than to cry.
She had few friends because
she wanted constant attention
and was mystilled when
friends were occupied with ac-
tivities that did not include
her.
Joining Cast
HOLLYWOOD (UPO
Royal Dano and Richard
Mulligan have been added to
the cast of "The Undefeated''
starring John Wayne and Rock
Hudson on location Jn Baton
Rouge, La.
Mltlne.. I'/
•I 1•:111
Tonltfll 11 11"
Peter Ustinov. Maggie 5mlth
• Ka~Malden
liEORloE JEAN
PCPPtl.RO SEBERG
' .. ,, n" t ..1,:l~ ... •1.;.:.W
Thi DAILY PILOT off1ra 101111
of •h• h11t f11t11r11. Irv ach11I 1
1¥1'\'IV of ttttltrt. l"llltl.lt It
t !l'f !11Wtp1,lf Ill fht lttllOll•
A unique scholarship • .,.... ~ai:ed with )ht Ft. Lee (Vo .)
ment with the Army Is -pJytna Players, a community theater
off-for four former aervicemen -group sponsored by the Army
u well as lheater1oen at Special Services. ln lMS he
Califorrua State C o 11 e 1 e , won the 2nd Army en·
Fullerton. terte.loment contest f o r
The Army Entertainment dramaUc re&iting. He abo dld
So.bolarships and A w a r d s more than 20 showa at Army
Prot:ram (AESAP) ecreens and Alr Foree bases in
talented servlcemei\ and the Genna~'.
• . college prov'l.des r I n a n c I a l Paul and Faz.lo, both of
uslatance to those chOBen. whom came to CSCF in 1!168,
"AESAP provldes us ~th are graduates in drama . Most
experienced people f r 0 m recent alwnnus Is Paul, who
various parts of the world who finished his MA degree rt-
deslre to further the l r quirements last January alter
-
_...,,...., • .,, dramatic educatloo," 18.fS Dr. specializing in theater design.
the ocenery for the malnlta ..
production of "Tartuffe" and
"lntermmo." He allO------Wll
a.ulttanL 1Ui1e manaaer for
"Ollvtrl"
Fazio, "II.to lludied I t Pasadena Pllyhou11 College
of 1'}eater Arts for three
yean before comlna to CSCF
to earn a delfee, completed
requirements for the B.A. In
January of lMB. While at' the
college, he received the senior
director's award for "The
Brick @d the Rose,'' and
perfonned, for the first time,
bl! original one-man mime
show, "I Shill lmpersonate a
Man." 'CAMELOT' DESl6NER
St1ph"1 Goldm1n
James O. Young. drama Among his many theater ae·
department chairman. tlvitles at CSCF, be deslgned '"~rough it, we have 8dded 1f=:'.=========~=========1\I a healthy kind of maturity to
drama productions, thereby
benefiting the C<lllege, students
and theatergoers alike," he Mesan Does
Sets, Lights says .
AESAP, since It began al
CSCF in 1966, has brought
In '" -me}ot' seasoned entertainers Jack \...a campbell, Ollie Nash, Larry
COsta Mesa 's S t e p h en
Goldman, new resident !et
designer for South Coast
Repertory, is creating the
scenic and lighting effects for
the musical "Camelot" at the
Rio Hondo Mu.sic Thfater in
Whittler.
Goldman, whoae credits l:n·
elude all forms of theater
from happenings to full opera,
is a graduate of Brandeil
University with a degree in
Fatlo and Christopher Paul to
the campus.
Campbell, a Fullerton resi·
dent, participated in the Anny
entertainment program for
three years before coming th
CSCF last fall . He directed
more than 20 plays i n
Germany and will direct
Bertoli Brecht's "11lreepenny
Opera" next fall as his
master'! thesis project.
Nash, of Placentia, came to
CSCF in l!IS'l. He had ap-
theater design. He recenUy ~-1• ....,. , " detl(ned the set for SCR's
production of !'Room
Sttvice. ,,-'· · j
lac.I.al" 1..i-,.._. ..
MJ4.S..tNnl CelH•nll•
Jack Lemmon
•••
Catherine O.neuve
Ch1rlu l•v« -l'tler L•wfenl M~rfll Lt't'
lit • l.-!c hltt•y
"THE APRU. FOOlS"
WM11d1p : ,, .. • t :U c ... ,._ Sat. 9lld ,,......,
frMI .... "'"" AflftlHllllr IV", tlllil S......,1
Afulh l ut CllUlllWll fk
Slhlrcl1y Mlrn.:
AfMltl u.• OlllllrM fk
Starts
Tomorrow
J UNI 25
Dlrectlng the l.emer·Lowe --•11
muaical I! Squire Fridell of SI fOVI[ \!::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~11
Sun.set Beach, see.n recently in Mlt!C~ I~~"' P'
SCR's "La Turlsta." Fridell's 1 • • '-"JLL-1 ~ 1 ClHfMA TllUTER SOlD our TONIGHTI
choreographer for "Camelot." ., Long Be1ch Jewish Community Center Benefit
Tho lit llroldw•y
Muslcol Show
STAITS WI DNllDAY.
wife , Melanie, is AS ' I
The show will be staged Fri· .._., • 'I I 11 I day and Saturday. June 27 l:>l...J
and 28, at' 8:30 p.m. in the PLUS
Whittier High School auditor-
I -C1mporshlp Funcl ,
1
STARTS WEDNESDAY
A GIANT or A MOVIE. I fAOll.ITDrAMDVll~ ium. --· ............... ----·-· ...... ll\UR llam:llUr [i
'Committee'
Coming to
Melodyland \fii~~~~
The original San Francisco
company of ' ' T h e Com·
mittee," the Bay City's most
celebrated 1atirical revue, will
pruent tliis unique stage show
a~ Melodyland the week of Ju·
ly a.is.
Directed by Alan Meyerson,
''The Committee" opened in San F.rallci!eo live years ago
and hu been received so
enthusiastically, it is now an
institution there.
It is best described as an
"instant revue," since the ma·
jority of the topical satire is
ad-libbed, allowing no two
shows to be alike as Ill
performers cast their barbs at
everything from sex: and
poliUcs to integration and
censorship.
Ends T onlght
"THE KI LLING OF
SISTER GEORGE"
lell ~ter I•
''THE SERGEANT"
ITAlts WIDNUDAY
W .. t DltNJ'•
"THE HORSE WITH
THE GRAY
FLANNEL SUIT"
Alto
"THE GNOM E MOBILE "
FROM 2 P.M.
Ends Tonight
Vuet10 Redt,.....
"THE LOVES OF
ISADORA"
A110 ,,
11.c• HIMtM9
"A FINE PAIR"
St•rts Wadnnd•y
EXCLUSIVE
Jack Lemmon and
Catherine Deneuve are
"The April Fools"
T•t1~• 1!9a:.
AC:U.,. Ctftltt F'itnw~"'°" A~lo.-.t,_,_...._
•
COLUMBIA PICT Ul\E8 Pl'll•8"ENTa ...
lllHIT I DMll1 I ~iiiii"'cjjjji1 1
•1c1f /'11u1r .... ~ ......
CARL~F0R.EMAN'8 1 ' CUU.ll'DMMAH'll l w .
•1c11111•11aL1 8 1 1 ~an•~!!
. """-n°""'"" ~· ~LD , •• =: . . '""'""'"""'"" ... -,.,, •fl -=.;.;··· =----'""=--...:::1~
~<~~
THE IRBllTBBT
BllTBRTlllNMENT
VllLUE
IN THE U.B.ll.
,~r
OPENING TONIGHT
FOR A LIMITED EHGAGEMENl' <Nu-,,,_ ..,_,,..
llEVU I!: PHABI! II
llattlng
BlACK/WlflTE a 14
Soria1Jonal-•-llll'a-lllt
8TEWIE STONE
Hip Young Comedlllnellrect from rMrYOlt
JEANINE NAPOLl!ON lluPtr IOOQ111"1-'#eet COtill: deibut -IUD CROU • Mt:I OK19Ql4
Coolltllll-D .....
~ATION81 (71ll) 77>-T777
SHCJYrnMIES 9 100 AN0.11•00 P.M,. ~T.
SVNOAY AT .aG
GRAND HOTEL
•
..
MUln"IN•TON •~H • M7 .....
N•w ,,... rwrr, aett1 ..,..,
of "PortHy'• Co111pl.Jllt"'
'A YIRY RlfjY,
llMNSllY APIWI MOVI.
Vanessa Redgrave
'The Loves of Isadora':
Aho IN s..a..r I•
''The lllu1tr:ate;d Min'' :
STARTS WEDNESDAY
Mllti .... hit; rr.. I p.-. -·----
Ti&lllllCOl.Olr -·----
PUT WH IN
YOUR POCKET
Seti unwanted ltmis
wll!li a DAU..Y PILOT
Owlfted A4.
PHONI
642-5671
' . ..
I· ,,
'
'·
' '
It Dolll.Y "LOT s
LBOAL NOTICE
\
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1 8":1:1 .. li ~ Pm ~· ..,,., nr t1~
---• •
Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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-G-
American Stock Exchange
OArl Y P1lOT ..
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I •
12 DAILY PILOT Tutsdl,y, June 24, 1969
For The Record ; Wile's Plea Leads to Viet Transfer
· GRAND RAPIDS, MI ch,
<AP.I . -Mrs. euru, R.
............ ....,,.,, ............ .....,, ... ,""'ime::!:3' ....., ............. :~~~:~ 2i!fc~~!: s~!r~":ld~~
After her first husband,
Davld Demorest, was killed in
action ln Vietnam in 1007,
Mrs. Skillman enlisted in the
Women's Army Corps and
served 10 montt1s.
Later, hQwever, Skillman
~·as Lransferred to Vietnam ,
and Mrs. Skillman wrote to
f'ord:
Sklllma11 \\•as transferred
last week ftom Vietnam to
Ko .en for the remal11in1 18
n10 ths of his tour of duty.
Marriage
~ens es ,_,
..LAWltf:MZ.WYNN, DoNld II:, •S. Ill
00 AYO(.ICICI AYt. llld Vll"lll'+I A ,
Jt, of 1U\li W..•19old Av1., bollo ol ,_ Otl ...,,.r.
AOVEll:TllilMINT
Lose 10 lbs. In
10 days on
Grapefruit
Diet
HOLL YWOOO, CA LIF.
!Speci•IJ, - This i1 the
revo1ution•ry 9rape f ruit
diet that everyone is sud-
denly talking about, Liter·
a lly t hous ands upon thou-
sands of capie1 have been
passed from hand to hand
in f•ctaries, plants end of-
fic es througho ut the U.S.
e nd Canad a.
LUNDGll:EN·ll:AFUSE. L••rv a .. ~r. of <1(1.1 Avenkl.tl Teru. tnd EllJ1tie1n
I< , M, ol m lotiillro, l>O!ll DI $1n ,_,
$HULTZ-GODWIN, Jahn C , 1,, of
llOG E. Colt•ns. O•tn!lf' •lld JUO••n A., Ji. ol Jn Proto«!, NeWPOrt
&llCh .
COAKlEY-KllllMGSWORTH, W•ll•f
J ,, "· <If UOI Mortn ''" W1•rmln-
•••• '"" TllenKt I., 11, DI 2111 W. l<nlhurll Plitt . S1nt1 Ant.
BILLSTllOM-SATTLEll, (hlflH E,
:it, al llU• Simo• Pl1ce, Cosl1 Me ..
'"" Sn••"" L., 26. a1 •10 N. Gt••~•ll,
Or•nae. w .. Tl(INS-(IJOllNEBY, Mt•¥in II . ll.
ol JU E. 11n. Plec•, COlll Mtti
1nct SU11n, 21. ol 100 Avoudo. cc.-
"''" de! Mir. McCOllMICK·HENORICllSON, P1trlCll
J ., 13, ol UIS 11.-vtll LIM, Lt-
IUM Bt1Ch ind Suun E~ Jl. Ill !._.5 w ... 1..-11, Drl"9t· ~HEOAROVICH-NIEMCU.IC, P1ter J.,
21, ""' Ctule "·' 71, bOll> ol r.l9 E. 19th St., Co•ll M~u.
GllAS3E-Vl<LERIO, M1cn1•I H .. 20. of
ltll E,,,.,r•kl .., .... •"" Su11n M ..
11 ol •ti! lrO<luO•• llNd, blllh of W~stmin11tr. KllONICIC..U.ROON, J0111ll>1n II., 27.
"' t!J w. Fffn D•lvt, FUllll'l"!Oll •"" c11rllllnc c.. 11, o1 2011 O!ll'l"a, Mfll
Cou•t, UC lrvint,
BUSH-SHELDON, Oenn11 S .. :JO, •""
K1tl!M11M>, U, beth al 611 Vlc!arl1,
Cosli Mll'!il.
Ol(K·R:EISNER, 11cn1ld C .. 14, of
Sit s. Vin Neu. S1nt1 Ant 1nd
M•rl1n U., .12, ol •321 Stn••• W••·
Irvine.
1-.NDIOAIQ.WllllAMS. w .1111m, 'l'2,
al 700t W. R-rll Ave .. Fuller!°" .no M•rv A., 21. Of 3115 Sff flrHJO
l t M. (or ..... del Mar.
JOHNSOH·Cun1NG, D1vid O.. JI,
tnd Bonnie M.. lt, both <If '1$1
Humboldt, Wnlmln•t.,,..
FIGGE-HINTZ. en··~ c ., 71. or
16111 Mariner Drive. HuntlnDlon
B~tCh 1nd Lindt l ., :Ill, of l519
F1u,1, Long Beecn.
Jl<MES-HAll. 11.iCl'l•rd 0 . n. of t:ltt
V1ldera OrlYe, Hun!lng!on llttcn
~nd C1ral l , 20, ol 116 (Kil Pitt•,
Costt Mn.1 ~A BLE-Sl<BlE, Jerrv L., 17, of 1111
Seou!ve<lt lllvd.. u1n NUYI 1nd
Mtr!l>f W .• •5, of 1111 Vklt Pl1ce,
Cost1 Mfu. CUNNtNGH-.M·SANFORD. llr\ln P.,
JO, ot U63 T•m~lt 1-illls Dr1v1. la·
cun1 Beech ena S1....:lr1 I(., 11. ot
lllO Wnr Ave .. Cos!1 Mell,
June t
Gl>RNETT-EVANS, Wtl1PI' l, 2J. 1nd
Ed,.. L .. :r.J, bolll al IHl M1llov
Odve, Hun11"91Drl S.t<h.
NOACK-Pl<LME'R. J<ITTI F.. 7S, '"" P1ull 11 •• 11, baln DI 7011 Sltrrllo1
""'" Sllnlon. KOVELY-MtOOttNELL, Wllll1m A.,
27. ol Ult W. Balbaa Blvd .. New·
oart Be1cll tnd K1tnlft" I<., 2•,
of 110 S. S~lllven, Santi ""'·
SEtBERT·LAUER, Jatin C . 10, of
lltlt Ptrtl 51. •nd P•mel• J .. 17,
ct 1721 P1rJ. SI .. bolh of Hunllt111ton
ll•tCll
MC:KEE-TllAVIS, William ". 16, cl 1U4 Monrovlt Avt. 1....:I K1rmt l .•
19, of 11• GaverflOr. botn al C:oll•
Me\I.
VAL01Vl,.·WELLS. S•bast:a" M., ll, tnd Halli E., Sl. boTft cl Jill Cork
L1<ie, Caot1 Mna.
BURLESON-BURLESON, Ma• W .. lJ,
1nd Ulrolnf1 II., ll. both of 1711
51>111,...r. Cl>Sll M~.
NOR(OM·MOORE, Jal'ln F., JI, of
16191 Green St. 1nd Katl'ltrlr.e ,.., 11.
ol 15111 Nottlng..,1m Drive. bolll or
Hunt.n91on ll•acn. w-.sHtNGlON-KRl>FT, Jchn c .• 10. cl
'811 8tv•llOft Drovt. t.!Twi>or! 8•.Cll
•"" K1rtn L .. 10. Ill llll (1mQtra
ltnt. S~t1 Ana. KUNDA-LANGLEY. Ktnne!n a . n.
er Ul?O ltldare. Glfndc1.o end s~
san M., 27. cl UI07 VII Cth"'rnlt,
C1olstrtno Be,.ch.
J ONES-FRIEDMAN, II.ob••! J .. 10. al
J09 P1 ll1K11 Ave., S•n Clemontt
'"" 1C1tnryn L,. 17. ol ll!H Blue
Fl11 Drl~t. 01111 Po•"'·
WILL!,.MS·SCHWALM, Rllrlilkl T , :!Cl.
ol •1• Ctnyan l>cre" lt<fun1 llfl<h
arid Elol•e C., 11, o1 11~11 Ctnoh
l i nt. Girder\ GfDVO,
BRICKEL·DUNANN, J1mo "'·· n, of
11911 Wt lnuf '"" P1mel1 M., 22.
word of 111 u1Ccen II•• spro1d
ll~t wlldllrt. BttlU>t !hl1 I• mt
d1t! thlt retlly work•. Wt hlv•
ttstirMnl•l1 In au• llln re-por1i"9
on ll'>e succ"' 01 m1, dltr. 11 yo.u
tollow Jt ••1c11y. yo.u si-kl lose
10 PCIUnOS In ID dav1. Tntrt wlfl ti.
no ....,lllM II»• In tn• !!rot ICIUr d1ys.
llut l'OU wl!I 1uocrtn1y drap 5 l)Clu""s
on the Jllo d1y. Thilrffl1M y0u will
IOl1 one POUnd I Gay untl! n.e lO:h
d1y, Tnen yOU will IO•• I VJ pa;,l'ld1
Ivery two dlVI until \'OU 11•1 dOwn
10 'fC'I' prc>(ler -lgM, Be•t Of •II.
lhfr• wl!! be no hunvtr PlllQ•. Now
rwlled '"" eni.r11t<1. !!lis new di tt
pl1n 1111 yo.u •Ml yourstlt wit~
1000• "'" wer1 formerly '"!orbidden,''
luth 11 boll 1Tt1k1 rrlmmtd will>
111, ra.!st or fr ied Cl'l lcken, rlcn
gr1vl1H, m1yonn•!1e, IC!l'.ster 1wim-
m1ng I~ bu!tfr, t>«on 41!1, 11uugn
l<ld &erambttd eg11s. You can tll
11t1111 vou ire lull, unhl yOU c~noot
~sibly eat 1ny mort. And 1:ill
k>t.f 10 POUnds in rn1 hrs! !en d~YI
plus l 1'r paunas every two daY'
tn1r111ter until your W!igh! Is down
lo normal. Tnt 1ecrt1 ~l!ll'ld llli1
M W "quJCll weigh! lau" diet Is
1lmpl1. Fat does ncit !arm 111, And
!llt 9r111ffruil lulc:• In 111i1 oew Oitl
ICll •1 I tl!lly•! (t/lil "trlg.gtr").
ID 1t1•I !he flt IM.lrnlf>9 Pt1KHS, You
s:uH roun•ll on tn• "''"'"1e<1 1000
tl•tld In 1ne dlel Dll11, '"" u oll lo!f
11t1li9~Uy 111 •<Id ••Ctsl body
lluido.. When IM fat •nd blo.a! ire
gone YOU will CtlJI ta lose w•IOl>I 11 ·--o,-----N,..,-o'"'wcc:-----.
Ind your W•lghl will •t,...ln con-y U K
•'-"'· ... copy O! !l>IJ MW I nd ·~•r!-
lln(lly 1uccnslul dill Oll n c1n bl c L D
obl1lt>fd by •endi119 51 IO GRAPE-YOUR HI
Fii.Uit OIE.T PUBl lSHE ll:S, Suilt
10•, De~. Jl-70.. Ult N. H19hla"" LEARN
Ave., Ho11.,.-, C•t•f. '°°21. Money-WILL
~" '""'"'"· " ""' ONO"' '"' ' dill Plln you 1>1ve llOt IOSI 1 llClund• 0 T
Jn ttle first •tv•~ d1y1, 1roatner 4 T SWIM· A
pounds In 111• nt•! 1 d1y1. Ind 1 ~,
pounds evuy lwo days 1nere1l1er,
simply retu<n Ille ditt pl1n tnd your BL u E Bu OY
l1 will be rtlu<ldfd prampuy a<ld
wilf\oul irgu......,t. Te1r out tnl•
""'"'II• •s 1 rtmll'ldtr. O«ide now
to r191ln tile trim. 1!1r1c1lvt !i!jure
<If yOU< YOllt~. wl!ll1 t nloyln'iif ntar-
1~ bru~f1s1i, luntlles 1nd dlnner1. 546-1800
ot 11n1 $1n1• M•drln• C:l•Cle, b<llll
o1 F011nt•!n v1111,,
LE flLEV·JOHN5°"•' Normen 8., tJ,
cl 1311111 l• "'' 1nlf Rtmorwi "'It., 11,
of .7'01 C1llfo<nl1 SI~ bolll of Wkt.
mlnsltr. ~0A8E.lLINl·COLT-N, Edw1n;I, It o1 110 w. 1111o sr. 1nd J.nlc. fl., 2t
01 1SJ 511111,...,, -ol Cosl1 Mffl.
1.AJ V•GAJ, Nlh'~ -...... ,,i.. llctnlll h.111td Mrt lncJudt: · Ju ... I Mlcn111 Pl!t• ClifltQ, :n. •nd L~NWlle Bohltr&, It, bolh ot Hu11tlncilon Btlcll °t:"o7:, 1'i~1C,~ .,1\t:im~111i::4 Jt MI
JUN t M~~ 1~·t~1~r1';,;. lt,:r .. er:~ '
1'. ol Tu1Hn Mlc"-'I Pllrlck l).iflv tt. of r.,,11 Mn1. •fld ~lf\le An11 Cl:lin1on. ~, ol Hunrlnci!Oll ICll
Be<1ton l. K•I l'' n~ llld C1rol1 It.. C1u1ev, 25. bo II of os11 Me11. wne I
Jlmmlf l•I"'' •1 of Cost• m•t•• •NI --------------1 Lind• L. Kord~C.,,;. 2111e1t P• m ~lnos
lv1% Es~:i~~lnl\,~ o~;~~un':°' r.s~·~:;
A,..11e1m Rg.twd Ctrroll DIUQOS, 22, 1nd M1routrl!t MM MMfOf!CI!\, \&. both or Hunl!na!Clll Bt•cll Ju,.. IJ G•O:vrd~ ~:~':inti.a°'JJ. ~ :"~,
Mm Srev1t11 Lt .. 11 Abbol!, :n. incl O!tnc K•v L1vl1110n, n. borh of LtGU,.. Btach w~~mv1~01~1:'1'w$.1.r011D~~otk~~~ r!roaton Bc1ch Ri(~~r, N{1t:r~ Ct~~~~~. 31;,,"~'~'l:J
Founllln Vlll•Y o .. v•d A. Collurl, 11, ""' ~lrleV Ann McCllnrlc•, 26, bOlll ot wesrml.,.1•r
J"W':'rm1n~·,,,~~'~!~01 ~i"e ~Ve.:!
:ii, of Lons &etcll
Jtmn A. Sotne:•. l•. ot We$lmlm!er, and Ooflnt Rich. 2S. of Hu11Uncrl011 Bttcll JUM J(
Thom11 r.· · Wvtt, '5, of Wrsrmlmttt,
J .. 1~ t1ir.:.~.~110~·0ct~1a::1~"' .. ~1~, G1rden Grove, 1nd O am I 11 I c 1 Romalt:I• BlndY, •1, al Huntlncilon Be•cl> Alfonso VlllllObos, 21, al Wntmlmi.r. 1nd Ancrlt Hu11on, JD, of G1rcltn Grovt °'r~n °w.1~P;f;;:; ii: :l ::1~1:·,:,nd
ltovd Bvran Fortune. 21. al HunUncr!on e .. ch, •nd Jov Ari-SI.alt. 1&. DI Sltntan J~rorne II, Ad•mcrvk. 71. 1nd Louise Hllbur11, 21. tx>tl> 01 Ca.II Mes.e
Flcvd Oovle J•ckt:;'~ ;li, 1nd E~rlrnc ft';~~•n, 21, I of H~"t na!an
01Qer David Olsen. 39, of WHlminstt.r. ,.nd Jessie ltllu!h F.a•n, J3, al But,.. Ptrk Peter Wiibur Newm•n. l6. of Newuort
Belch, •M N•11tr BlatM,, 2', ot
s .. nt1 A"" (•rl R. Slltllfl", .,, of c ... i. Mn1. I nd Ooro!lw Louis• K-1t:. 19. of Hoo•well. P• ~~ ... 1~1:0".it ~~~-a1•w:~m~::;: R.
John li~1 • Phllllos. ?1. of Or1ncie. Ind •• LH O«kl r<I, 31, ol Fou11t1 n 1Htv R:lcl!ard H. Beroeron .... al Downey, 111<1 Mtrv V. Sc:hwennet1r, ,40, of l1unllna1°" Be1ch OIVOllCES FILED Smllh, DI-Elt lne vs Henno H. Kemo, JIMI R VI lltndl!l B. Demmons MltY Jtn• VS w.,1n F. ll1n0111. t1r11 L1lan vs ll*n o ..... N0tm1n. Btrl l , VI Oorll IC. Wood. BUiie Ann VI J•mes Ert>HI McCl!ter!v, ll Clberl C1tvln vs Hlldt Oorttn ~'::~~~· d1T:,,AL"!'~. '~.ri~~ J.
Meetings
Tuffd1Y
Rorarv Ctub of Newpar!-BalbDa, lnolne
COii! Cou11trv Club, 4111 E. CO>tsl
Hiohw1v, Coron1 del MAr. 4:lll p,m,
(osra M•»-Newoerl Harbor lio<l1
Club, Mest V•rde Coun1ry Club,
Ca•t1 Me•~. 6:l0 pm.
loa•!master~ Club 110F, Kin,1 l 1ble
Res!lurant. W15!mln1te•, 6 P.m.
Balboa B1v Liens Club. VU\1 M•rln•,
1045 B1vsld1 Drlvt, N•WPoM Be1ch, 1
P.m.
$ocie!v tor the P reiervallon 1nd
Entour111tmenr <If B1r~r Shop
Ou1rlet Slt111ln11 In Amerlct, Cosll
"'"'' cn1Pttr. Colleve Park $cl>ool, l890 Nclrt Dame, Co•la MfW. I p,m. l.0 .0 .M. !Moos•) Mo. 1153, •l$ E. 11111
SI .. (osl1 """''· I: n P.m. 5cu11! Caasl Ac!IYe 20-lO Club, Vlll111e
Inn, 1n Mtrlr>e. Blltle>I l•llnd, 7:311
o.m,
Orangt Coe~t B'ntl 8 'rlll! Mf nl Lodq,,
TMiPI• Sh1ran, 611 W. H1mllton,
(O•t• Me••· 1:15 D.m.
W•t1nn t11v
We•lmin1ttr TOl•lml•t•r• Club, J,
Oe1n's P1nuk• HC1U1e, Wt1lmlnstrr,
6,\S 1.m. ,
Costa Mt>l·Ortnctt CN•t LIP<>• Club. Odie'\, 1n E. 111h sr., Coit• Meu, ' •.m. Blue Fl.tmt Ta1stm111!tr• Club, Mtl't
V•rde Coun!ry Club, Cost1 Mf•t. 1
a.m.
HunHn11lon Beach E.•change C:lub,
ICI""'' Tablt Resi t ur 1 n1, Wt1lmln•ler. noon.
Ca1t1 Mt11 Rct1ry Club, Cc1!• Mrst
Goll 1nd Coun!rl>' Club, Cos!I Mest, ·-· Wt•lmin•IPr E•ch.,1ge Club. H1 'Pfnnv
'""· 1.io.1 Buen Blva., Wf1trnlnster, -· Cast1 Me» OPtlmisl Club, Co111 Mew Gall 1nd Countrv Club, 17111 Golf
Coorse Drive, Ce11•1 Mfsa, nQOn, NewP0'1 Harbor Ber Group, Viti~
Marini. 10•5 Bay1ldt Orlvt, NtWPorl
Btcn, U :l5 c.m.
f ountain Valltv E•cl>1ne1e Club. Frtn•
coli', llUI B••c~ Blvd., 1-iunlln9ton Bfecn. n :u 1>.m.
He Wanted
A Che etah,
Gets Hippo
SEATI'LE (AP) Why
would a man wan t to own a
.hippopotamus?
"Oh, I don't know. Jtls bet-
ter than owning a cheetah,"
said Allan E. Smith, Seattle
realtor who has bought a 2,000
pound hippo for his Plain,
\Vash., ranch.
\Vhen Smith went to an
anima l dealer here to buy a
cheetah, the dealer offered
him an el ephant. They settled
on a hippopotamus.
tier name is Gertrude. She's
a Denver native, whose older
sister resides at Seattle's
\Voodla nd Park Zoo.
"Amazing at it may seem,
Gertude has a personality
that's out of this world," said
Smith. "She expresses af.
fection by opening· her-mouth
and ·letting ~ rub the inside
of it."
Gertrud e has joined a grow-
ing menagerie on the Smith
ranch which also harbors
llamas and Scottish longhorn
cattle. Smith also is thinking '
of buy ing some kangaroos.
"I just li ke animals," he
said. The ranch prOOuces only
<i lfalfa and timothy hay com-
mercially. The animals are for
Smith's pleasure.
"Hi ppo s a r e ve r y
economical for their bulk," he
says. "?I-fore economical than
an elephant." She stows away
half a bale Qf hay each day
J>lus vegetable t r i m m i n gs
from Leavenworth, Wash.,
1narket.
When she arrived at the ran-
ch last month, Gertrude li ved
in the basement of the barn,
sleeping in an insulated stall.
Ranch manager Bert Stegenan
dug a six-foot-deep pit near
the barn and filled it with
water, and Gertrude spe nds
mos t of her time there these
warmer days.
This winter, Smith plans to
convert half the barn base-
ment for her.
"I'm planning on getting a
cou ple of kangaroos to keep
Gertrude comany during Uie
winter," said Smith.
••she gets very lonely."
want to be one for the
time her hw;band has 1 n
ti:ansferred out of Vietnam.
Mn: Skillman told her story
to Rep. Gerald R. Ford, tR-
M.lcfl.), and he apparently got
the Army to act.
She got .marri~ a second
time. Her aew hml;>attd was.
stationed ·in Germany at the time. ' · t
"I'm expecling a baby in
June and want the baby 1 lo
have a falher . . • GQ\ng
through one death was enough.
I just couldn't go through il
again,''
HAPPY
H •• 1 h 1 pp y w11k1nd,
St1•t ,, by r11clin9 +ht WEEK·
ENOER in ih1 OAILY PILOT.
o lE.~~ FINAL DA VS!
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Think Slim for Summer
In just o few !hort weeks you, too, con lo1e 15-20-25 pounds and be
proud of the way you look. ladies, you'll be wearing the new
figure-revealing foll fashions with pride a nd confidence. And, Men,
the new toilor-shoped suits will look greet on you -once you've
rediscovered your waist. O verweight is not only ciomaging
to your health, but actually odds year1 to your appeoronc:e. Look
younger ond trimmer pl us gain new pep ond vitality the eo.y, proven
Health Spos way, Don't put it off-toke it off! Act now, for
1peciol low reduced role1 during Holiday Notionol Fitness Month.
INCOMPARABLE
FACILITIES
• He1ted Roman
Swimming Pool
• Ultra Modern
Cond itioning Facltities
• Finnish Rock S1un1
Rooms
• Roman Steam Room s
• Electronic Massage
• Florida Sun Tan Rooms
• Whirlpool B111ths
• Conditioning F.cilities
e Swiss Facial M111chines
FREE! FREE! '
Exclusir e Fe1tur11 Freel
Group SHmnaslio and
Swimna5lics lo music ~ No
lime limit on your visits
•No appoinlmenls nf!cessary
• Separale fac:ililies for men
• Separ1!e facili ties for
Women • Frile guest
privileges •Unlimi ted hours
-unlim ited days. Free ! Free t
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C.rwrleh' ~•lid~• ~ ... l!h Spc, 196?
SEPAR+-E FAqllTIES
FOR M &' WOMEN
' ' ' '
Free Tours"&' q~monnrllions , .•
Available Daily at All ioc1tton1
)\
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JUNE IS
NATIONAL
FITNESS
MONTH AS
DECLARED
BY THE
~ ~~ii
I
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The two of us • to serve "YOU better .. ...
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For your pe rsonal convenience Newport Balboa Savings has two locations
to serve you. Visit either office for:
THE SAME BIG 5.13% YIELD -the h;ghesl in the nai;on-on all ac-
counts when current annual dividend rate of 5% is compounded daily
and maintained for one year. Funds earn night and day, from day-in to
day-out. Funds received on or before the tenth of any month earn
from the first when held to quarter"s end.
THE SAME BI G 5.38% YIELD on 3 year BONUS 'CERTIFICATES
(I n mult;ples ol S1 .000) by add;ng the .25% BONUS DIVIDEND for
each of the three years to the daily compounded annual earnings.
THE SAM E SAFETY ANO SECURITY. You r funds are insured up
1o $15 ODO. We maintain high reservesj our lending policies are ' . . conservative.
THE SAM E SE RVICES : Sav;ngs and lnveslmenl Accounls, KEOGH
plan, Mon thly Security Accounts, Escrows, Sale Deposit, Money
Orders, R~versionary Trusts.
THE SAM E SMILES. The kind of warm, friendly, efficient service. aided by
modern f aci'llties and equipment· our personal concern is never computerized
SO BRING MONEY.
NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION {I}@
Mein Office: 338'5 Vi 1 Lido, Newport Beacl), California 92663. Phone : (71 4) 673·3130.
Coron• del Mar Office : Flnanelal Plaza, 550 Newport Center Drive 92625. Phone : (714 J 644 -1461
P. A Palmer, Chairman of the Board Agnes Blomquist. Pre sident
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JODEAN HASTING$, '42-4321
T.....,., ,_ ~ 1Mt I ,.. ll
Americans
=--------==------
Go Abroad -.
Far-away places are beckoning two area· students who will be
participating in the Americans Abroad program of American Field
Service.
Christine Weaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weaver of
Huntington Beach, will leave· tomorrow to spend eight weeks in Bom-
bay, lndia.
Flying out for Florida yesterday was Kirk Gresham, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Gresham, who will leave Miami tomorrow .for Cara·
cas, Venezuela.
Fountain Valley High School's third Americans Abroad. student,
!Vliss \Veaver, 17, will Hve with Mr. and Mrs. Minocher D. Dubach
and their daughter, Navneen, 18.
Dubach is a chartered accountant and president <lf Bombay's
Lion s Club, and the young senior will present them with a goodwill
token from the Fountain Valley organization.
Mrs. Dubach is a barrister at Jaw, an honorary magistrate and
active in social work. Their daughter is an interart. studen t at Born·
bay University. Miss \Veaver1 also an art enthusiast, will not be en·
rolled in school during her stay but hopes to attend classes 1vith her
host sister.
Kirk \viii live with Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Luzuriaga in a hillside
suburb overlooking the city. Luzuriaga, an architect with an oil com·
pany, designed the family home.
The young man, who will serve as Marina High School's mascot,
Odin, next year, will be taking a class in Spanish, on e of his academic
interests. A sports enthusiast, he enjoys skiing, skin diving and sail-
ing-an activity he will be able to share with his host family.
·---------·--------... --~·. . ----. -·-.
Kirk is the third Marina High Youth to participate in the AFS.
sponsored program. The student exchange program is sponsored by
the hi gh school and adult chapters which raise funds , host foreign
students on area campuses and select eligible students to go abroad •
UP, UP AND AWAY-Two Huntington Beach young
people will be participating in the summer Ameri-
cans Abroad program sponsored by American Field
Service. Kirk Gresham, (left) Marina High School
student, will spend 10 week s in Caracas. Venezuela
and Christine \.Veaver from Fountain Valley fli gh
will spend her summer in Bombay, Ind ia . Both stu-
dents have been active in their school AFS clubs.
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Guild Officers Continue Building
New officers or Sts. Simon and Jude Women's Guild
1vill continue to work toward the church building
fund . Installed du.ring a salad and dessert buffet
Juncheon were (hit) t1 rs. Theodore Henkel, second
vice president, and Mrs. \.Villis Mullins, president.
Also installed by Mrs. Robert lmrnegart, vice presi-
dent of the Los Angeles Diocesian Council of Cath·
olic Women, were the Mmes. Ted Janowsky, Law-
ren<:e Augustyniak and Leonard Herte.
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Pounds of Treasures Weighed for Benefit
A yariety o! treasures will be offered when the
Huntington Beach Gina Uhrlaub Chapter, City of
Hope, sponsors a rummage sale bet\veen 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. Saturday, June 28, in the Odd Fellows
Hall, 226 Main Sl. Mrs. Edward Uhrlaub (left) and
Mrs. Millard A. Plate prepare to weigh the pro-
ceeds from the benefit. Add itional information may
be obtained by calling Mrs. Uhrlaub.
Luck's No Lady: Poi~t of Friendship Ma.de the Hard Way
DEAR ANN LANDERS : A girl I work
with is a fantastically lucky crap shooter.
\\'henever she has the di~ everyone rides
her back and cleans up. I've seen her
make as many as seven passes in a row.
Two .weeks ago Lucky went to Puerto
Rico for her vacation. I knew she'd be In
the casinos every night-and wlnnlng, of
course -so I gave her $150 to play for
me. J made it pl ain lhal if she blew il I
wouldn't be mad, although I've ne ver
known her to Jose.
Tv.·il days after Lucky lefi for her vaca·
lion, I received a telegram which said, "I
hit a lousy streak and lost your dough. So
sorry.'' Twas really shook. but figured it
was bound to happen eventuall y. •
ANN LANDERS ~
Yesterday Lucky returned. She WU
telling the slrb In the cafeteria that lbe
had had a great time -won • over
and above her expenses. Whe 1he 11w me
standing there, she said, "Too bid aboUt
your lt50. My luck changed right after I
lost yours, Honey."
What do you think ol. a friend llkt thatt
-CHICKEN INSPECTOR 21
.
DEAi\ CIDClt: I lldlk 11'1 ...nlo 'lit
.. """ .. -ldlld ti • , __ .....
DEAR ANN LANDEftll : My boyfri<nd
b ta~."11 a co11e,. IUmnlU -1oo 'In
another c1t1. He P!"f...., his_ undying
Jove. for me -in wrtUnc. Hill letters. are
wildly puolonate and hlchly deoCl'lptlve ..
l would die If a member of the family
opened one by mistake.
In yesterday's Jetter he pdmonished me
for not responding in equally ardent
Janguqe. He .say1 my letters are guard·
ed and noncommittal. Now I'm begiMlng
lo wondu U he writes tho!e torrid letters
for hl• own erotic pleasure and wishes
me to respand In kind for addilional
1UmulaUon, or U he want.I me to put It In
wrlUng so he can show his friends? -
BIG DOLLY
DEAR DOU.: It's .entirely possible
tb1t yoar boyfriend cet ••• Jollies from
compe1ln1 red-bot eplsUes. But lte 1hould
burn 'e~, not mall 'em. E1plala that llt
--. . ..
must not put In wrlllni anytblnG he
wouldn't want read aloud to your molhcr
-anfl I.bat you praeUce what you preach.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : ~fy cousin
married three months ago. She is .so
proud of having snagged a professional
man it's revolting. The payort is this: She
Introduces herself as ?tfrs. Di-. What-
chmacallit. The other day v.•hen I told htr
ll was not in good taste, she re plied , "It
saves time. When I say Mrs . \Yhnt·
chamacallit, people always ask 1£ l'1n
related to the eye speclallst.''
Who is right? -FEET FIRST
DEAR FEET: You are, or eourte, bu t
conserve your brealb lo eool your soup,
Lovey. Your cousin is not Interested in
taste -she'• Interested only Jn letU.1
people know 1he married • doctor.
Alcohol ts no shortcut lo social success.
If you think you have to drink to be »
cepted by your rrtends, get the facts.
Read "Booze and You -For Teenagers
Only,'' by Ann L..enders. Send 35 cents in
coin and a long, self-addressed, stamped
envelope with your request
Ann Landers wlll be gh1d to help
you with your proble™. Sehd them to
her in care of the DAILY PILOT. encl ..
Ing ti seU·addressed, stamped envelope.
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GOODBYE, MOMMY -Sending ~1rs. Charles 1\·lar-
vin off for a busy year of activity are twin daugh-
ters Kin1berly {left) and Holly, 7. J\ilrs. 1'1arvin '»'as
in stalled as president and the Orange Coast Mothers
of Twins Club celebrated its first anniversary dur·
iqg a dinner meeting in l;-rancois restaurant, Hunt-
ing ton Beach.
Mother's Club Lights Golden Club Arranges
Rummage Sale Variety Candle on Anniversary
Combining their first birth-
day celebration with !he in-
stallation of new officers were
members of the Orange Coast
fl1othcrs of Twins Club,
Heading the active group o(
40 members will be Mrs.
Charles Marvin of Fountain
Valley, president.
Newport Scene
For Busin ess
Exeeutive board 1nembers
of the California Federation of
Women's Clubs, J uni o r
Membership will make the
Newporter Inn their head·
quarters June 26-28 for thei r
·annual summer bo a r d
meeting.
Hosting the event will be
members of L-Os Ce rritos
District and their prcsidrnt,
~1rs. Stephen Pust ay .
Under consideration wlll be
project3 for chairmen, plan~
for area meetings and general
organization of the new ad-
ministration.
Boredom Beat
By Brisk Pace
Do you ha ve time on your
hands -arc you bored -are
you new in lhf area ?
If a .. yes'' ans.,.,'ers any of
these questions. the Auxiliary
of Hoag Memorial Hospital in-
vites you to altend one of their
mo nthl y m embership
meetings to learn about the
volunteer opportunities avail-
able.
The next meeting will take
place at 10 ~1.n1 on Thu rsday,
June 26. in lhe hospital's
Conference Cenlt'r. If you arc
unable to attend al this time.
they are seheduled 1nonthly on
the fourth Thursday.
For addit ional information
call Mrs. Robert Unger, 54.8-
876.1.
LEGAL NOTICE
SUl'l!'IUO• cou•t OF fi'IE STAT! OF CALIFOllNIA
FOil THE COUNTY OF OIANGE
..... A..ifH
HOTICI! 01' HEAlllNO OF ,l!'TIT IOIOI
l"Oll PllOMTI! 01" W1LL AND F()lt
LEnt11s Tl!STAMl!NTAltY
E11tl9 1111 ANNI! Wtlll""'I 8RENNAN
l>o<M~
NOTICE 1$ ME!l;E8'1' GIVEN T""t
Bini! of Amlt'lcl , NlllONI Trull 11'111 II•·
.,.., A-.lallon ""' l•I" Mrl l" I ptlo!lo<> ~· •••~ of wilt 1"4 for ls1wnc:1 ol L.tll!<'l Tnt...,..,lt•w lo Pf! hontr
rtl"'tft(~ It ...nk:ll h mt<M tor lurlhtr
H rtklil .. , .. INI IMI lfll llmt tlld Pli-cl
crf ""'"" Ille _.,,. NI llee!I .... tor Jut\ I, 1Mtl, II t .• I 11'1., lro """ COl>rl.._,, r'I
o-t'1'f1Wt!I No. l vi ... Ill e-1, 11 1'0CI
WMI Elt!llll St rwt. 111 11W Clfl' ~ S...,1tl
/Vot. C1tlfwl!l1.
Dtl'M J'""I It. '"' W E. ST JOHN eou..tv (11!'11!
NUll!WllZ, HUIWITZ AND ltlMllt
tJt.n.I lll'Mf
H.-t lffc~, C1Ml1n1I .. f1MI
''" 1no VJ.lf'M ""'""" ""' '""'"....., 1"111111"'"' Or1""1 Cet1i Otlll' l"til:lt,
Other officers, ali from Hun·
tington Beach , installed by
Mrs. Gene Monden. Wcs<sitlt•
Mothers of Twins, L o s
Angeles, included the Mmes.
Richard Clifton and Jack
Taylor, vice presidents; Frank
J~arold son, recording
secretary; Charles Saunders,
c o r r e sponding secretary;
R ic hard KI o s te rm an,
treasurer, and Don a Id
Stewart, parliamentarian.
1.lrs. Clift.on recently '~·as
elected treasurer for the
Southe rn California 1.1others of
Twins Clubs during a state
convention in San Diego.
Golden Harbor Club •Nill of-
rer a wid e collection of ite ms
at a rummage sale scheduled
for Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, June 26 '10 28.
Dishes, kitchen utensils twtd
other household aecessOr!e1
will be available along wlth
jewelry, toys and clothing. For
late shopper s, the sale at 867
\Y . 19th St. in Costa l\lesa \1•ill
be open until 8 p.m. Ju r.r 26.
The doors will open at 9:3U
a.m. all three days and close
at :>:30 p.m. on Friday and
Saturday, ·
Gilbert Seal, gene r a I
chairman, will be assisled by
other members in arranging
the event
Highlighting ulher club ac-
ti vities will be a party at 8
p.m. on Thursday, June 26, in
..<Ne\li·por~ Beach Mason i e
Templ e. Guests of Golden
1-tarbor White Shrine o f
Jerusalem will be lhe diamond
jubilee association of Southern
California shr ines. l\1r. and
Mrs. Al\\•yn Lane \\'ill replace
frlr . and ~1rs. Jack Chapman
as watchn1an of shepherds and
worthy high priestess.
~!rs. 1\1 i I d r e d Eslep
chairman of the evening. will
be assisted by f.trs. Freda
Barnes.
Also attending t h e in-
stallation dinner in francois
restauranl were members'
husbands.
The club \\'as founded by
l\lrs. Stewart. ~1rs. l\1arvin
and Mrs. KlosLennan to pro-
vide mothers of 1nultiples an
opportunity lD discuss mutual
problems, c o n d u c t philan·
lhropic projects, exchange
twins' clothing and equipment
tind provide a social outlet,
Plans on the Menu
For Ebell Luncheon
TOPS Aids
Weighty
Problems
in CORONA DEL MAR
T • "tl-P f,r~I b 1 ""11
t .-.o•ds fos.~ ; , -,1->1
O"'d keeping ,,.· 1..,,
•:x-d Come to ·re Jne
u"d o"'lv Weigl-1
\Votch'!rs•. Mo11v
1nou~oflds ol peopl&
1hrc.t9hcut 1he Uri ied
5toies end m 01her p0r1s
'QI ll'oe we<ld Sit'"' es~h.rllt
lollciw OUT ~11~ tJ e ... e .,;~:
conirol C•O(lrOrr>
/-lo pill~. f>lo storvo:io'I
rl e1 s Yo>J C'o' ·~·r~ I -:·;1' (
r-ao's o dov ard1l-en
s:-'!'e, ond '>-:iu lase
weight.
D::ri'trr 1s•hschor><e .
P~11 ·~· ..... sJm
~·.·,~;,, dvl!'• J2 00
WEIGHT@,
WATCHERS.
I ............... ........
CLASS OP ENINGS NOW I
THIS WED NESDAY , 9:30 1.m. o• 8:00 p.m.
1! 011 Com,,.unav Co,q•191ti(ln1I Churth
6 11 H,l;oltop• (off Co11' Hw'yl
CALL IJS·5S05 for f11.rthor l1for111atl111
ASK FOR FREE BROCHURE
,_ 11, , .. 2'-,,.. 11J.W9 '-----·----------------
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.Position
Retained
Retalnlni the chairman's
gav'l or the Woman's Aui·
illary to the American Society
of ,Mechanical Engineers, Los
Angeles Section will be "1rs.
Harold S. Spaulding.
Installation cere1nonies will
' I.de place during the annual
luac.heon meeting Thursday, ~
June 26, at ll a.m. in the
Bluffs, Newport Beach. hosted
by Mrs. Joseph C. Widmont
Jr.
Others taking office during
ceremonies conducted by Mrs.
Robert W. Cockrell, past
chairman, will be the ltlmes.
A1frtd A. Lingo, v i c e
chairman·: George J. Barnell
and.. Raymond C. K e JI y ,
secretaries, and Arthur E.
Bender, treasurer.
During an open house in the
Widmont residence following
luncheon, Mrs. lf. J. Kc<!Hng
will be recognized for 25 years
of membership in the aux·
lliary.
Assisting "'ilh the open
~ouse will be the ~Imes. Clay .
T. Coley, Arthur E. Geisler ·
, and Kelly.
Poolside
Setting
For Style
Beauty Is Growing Things
Leo: Be Self-reliant
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greater confidence in you r opt-. , n10 .. s.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
13): Conflict may exist
between duty and home.
Concentrate on basic tasks.
The large problems will take
care of themselves. Push
ahead. Those in authority are
on your side.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
YOur mind may be on faraway
places • ..But doo't penni.l this
to degenerate into m e r •
daydreaming. Take care with
what you read and write, Be
aware of subtle nuances.
"HIAT T'IN&S
TO -&o NATIVE IN"
HAWAIIAN SHOPS
Fashion Island -Newport Center
Open Sunday 1-5 p.m.
ANNOUNCING
Crispin "Cris" Torres
IS NOW ASSOCIATED WITH
DEE'S BEAUTY SALON
703 E. BALBOA -BALBOA
ON THE PENINSULA
673-sno
SPECIALISTS IN HAIR PIECES "--~~~~~~~~·~1
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I e JOB PRINTING
•• PUBLICATIONS· e NEWSPAPERS
I ,
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I Qu•lity Pri"tin9 •ncl Dep•ncl•ble S•rvlc:• for~ mor• thin • querier of • century.
.-22'1 WIST iALIOA M.WD.. NIWPOIT HACH -MMU1
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TUMBLEWEEDS
WEU.,HE!IEWEAR't,
El'IC..-STILL LOST
IN~IS BURNIN<7
11ESERTI 605ll,lf'S
SURE LONESOME OUTHERE!
MUTT AND JEFF
•
:tVE BEEN 'Tl11NKllJ'.
'
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• • • • • . •
By Ferd Johnson
... IT'S "THE CONST,lNT'
,H~!'AT OF UllEXPEC~JaP l <1~srs ...
I il
By Tom K. Ryan
-, 0 BOV!THE
-'SOUNPS OF
CIVILIZATION!
By Gus Arriola
.,
JtJNIORl b $TOP Pl.Ji.YI~ t11:
WIT/I )Q!,e , DIN~liR-·OR If 60 TO \t:\:lll
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•
' UPTIGHT-Peggy Lipton and Michael Cole, above,,,
pose as camping stude11ls in their search for . <(aP!;
Greer, tonight at 7:30, Channel 7 on "Mod Squad,
'l'lley meet with hO<tility, and silence in the cllsmal
weslem town. Tlge Andn>ws plays Capt. Greer.·
TELEVISION VIElVS
Cosby at Ease
With Kids
" , By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -I have to admit lo~
up !root that I have just about had it with reviewmg
television t:;artoons, or programs about cbildr~ or
wildlife. My mother didn't raise her boy lo review
cartoons .and children's programs. ·
The fact is, I don't remember the last_Ume I
reviewed a video cartoon no matter bow highly
touted, and only l!xtreme duress would force me to
write about one again at any time in the f1:1ture.
As for.programs about wildlife, they are getting to
be a crashing bQre. especialJy as they more and
more take up the good prime time space that might
well be devoted to meatier and adult matters. 'Ille
trouble, of course, is that such matters aren't as
safe to put oo.
AS FOR CHILDREN'S programs, I have always
been of the belief that out of the mouths of babes,
just as often as not, comes dull nonsense that no
self-respecting adult shou1d have to pui up with.
I have absolutely no reverence for the myth of the
wisdom of children, any more than I prefer the
company of amateurs to professionals. So far as I
am concerned, I would much rather be in the com ..
pany of a charming rascal than an honest bore.
I did, however -and I must admit it -wateh
a children's television program Monday night. It
was part of the "NBC Children's Theatre/' it was
called "As I See It," and it involved Bill Cosby as
host, with a group of youngsters from around the
country explaining litlle JIJOvies they shot them-
selves, as their films were being shown. More spe--
clfically, they explained their work to Cosby, and
chatte<t with him about it, and that was very smart
of the producers.
I MEAN, there's nobody in show business better
than Cosby with children. I believe him with kids
the way I believe John Wayne in a movie fight,
w11ich is to say a lot. I won't try to con you that "As
I See It" was an hour's worth of pure Academy
Award film, because it wasn't, but it did have its
moments of charm, poignancy and humor. -like
the litUe boy who wanted to go to an island so he
could get away from taxes. 'Ille boy was from Los
Angeles. Kids think about money very early here.
Anyway, the youngsters talked about the world
through their own eyes, and there was an awful
Jot of. just home movies kind of stuff, and there was
all that brotherhood stuff -white kids. black kids,
Indian kids, oriental kids -·but Cosby was pretty
wonderful with all of them because he doesn'I lalk
in colors. You cou1d just have him show up any-
where and build a show around him impromptu.
which looked pretty much like lhat NBC-TV did
with Monday nieht's hour.
COSBY WORE glasses, by the way, which I
like because it shows a fine naturalness and self-
confidence and a sort of nuts-to.show-business-rules
attitude. He kept things going nicely throughout,
and I mean 1f you're ge>mng to have a program about
kids, better Cosby then Art Linldetter, Oh boy, is
ii better,
I ought to tell you, by the way, that there was
another of those heartwarming commercials by the
deodorant called. "Secret" based on the theory that
women have stronier feelings than men. What it
mean!, I guess, is that they sweat more and smell
more. I re&lly want to thank "Secret" for. bringing
such elegan~ to the airwaves, and in return I ~
bestow on thit company my award for the most
disgusting commercial on television.
J)enniN the Menace
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; JI DM,'f "LOT
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BEATEN, BATTERED -Orange County resident
Jerry Quarry, badly beaten by Joe Frazier's bat·
tering. two-fisted onslaught Mooday night, shows
the wounds of battle on bis face. The doctor stopped
the fight after seven rounds because of a deep cut
under the right eye. This ' photo was taken in the
titird round -alter the seventh he looked worse.
Bizarre Story
46 Die in Plane Cras h,
1 Dead Man Stil l Lives
Forty-six men were killed when a plane
g.mashed into a Newfoundland mountain.
One of those dead men is alive today .
He's George ft.1acCall, president of the
National Professional Tennis League-the
group that includes the Orange Coast
area duo o! Rod La ver and Roy Emerson.
MacCall was on a plane stopping over
in Newfoundland on a flight to Ireland.
But when the crew came to awaken
him at 4 in the morning. he decided he
. was too tired to make the trek so he
stayed behind to take a train trip around
the liU.le coontry (now part o! Canada)
and to vis.it friencts.
Then be went back to sleep.
He was awakened shortly the reafter
Dodge rs Try
Big D To night
. .\t Atlanta
ATLANTA I AP) -Don Sutton may b<?
the happiest Los Angeles Dodger on the
club now that Maury Wills is back.
'"The first night Ma ury walked in there
was a different air in our clubhouse.''
Sutton said ~1onday night following the
Dodgers' 5-2 vlclory 01•er the Atlanta
Braves.
"Maury is our quarterback." continued
the Doelger pitcher who picked up his lllh
victory of the year. "I was happy to see
hlm come back because he's a leader _"
'Ille Brav es and Dodgers meet again
tonight with recently-returned Don
Drysdale, 3-2, on the mound for Los
Angeles. Ron Reed, 6-5, will pitch for
Atlanta.
Since Wills rejoined the Dodgers two
weeks ago, the club has recorded a 9-4
mark , including se1•en straight. Monday 's
triumph also boosted the Dodgers l'l
J?_ames shead of the Braves in the Na-
tional League's West Division.
"Walter Alston O)odger manager\ is lhe
only man who fully appreciates what I
can do for a club," \\!ills said.
"I can help tht> youngsters in my own
qu ill wa y. But, I have to be 1nyself Lo dfl
iL That's what hurt me \\•ith the J\1onlreal
Expos."
In addition lo c·ollecling a tripl~. and
single, Wills also v.•alked, sa{'ririced,
scored two runs and sparkleil al
1hortstop.
Since re)oininR the Ood$!ers. \\.'ills i~
, hitti ng .362. A! ri.tonlreal hr had dipped lo
. 250.
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t • ' ' ' 0 Tlnw -t :d All""lll "<f -
when another plane's crew was excitedly
talk.ing about something sti ll burning on
the hill.
That something was the plant> MacCRll
was su pposed to be on. And, for eight
hours MacCall's parents believed he was
dead because his name was on the
passenger list released.
They finally got the correct version late
in the afternoon.
You might jmagine that after a close
GL•JOt WHIT•
................. ,,,,
WHITE
WASH
••••••••••••••••••••
one like thal, a guy would swear of( air
travel for the duration of the life he near-
ly lost.
But not ~1acCall .
In fact, since that nerve-wracking es-
cape in 1946, he's practically lived on
planes. Last year he figures he logged
J68,000 air miles while administering his
pro net lortunes.
As a former pilot he has 1~,000 fiying
hours to his credit and he"s made 175
round trips ac ross the Allantic and 35
across the Pacific.
Clearly, he"s not a man bugged by one
close call.
~Je:riro S/1ould Pla11
This all came to light "'hile chatting
about the untimely dealh of ~texlcan ten-
11i1 star Rafael Osuna, who perlahed In •
plane crash June •·
ri.tt>xican tennis oUicials had 1ug:ge1ted
they might bow out of Davis Cup zone
play In deference lo the loss of I.heir top
star.
But l\1acCall agrees that such a step
would be the last thing Osuna would want
lo happen.
"If 1omelhin1 like this happened to
any of our guys, I'm 1ure the rest would
still waii1 to play. , .. espeelally if it were
something big like the Davis Cup,"
!UacCa\J reveals.
"When you live on plant's Like we do,
such thoughts cross your mind OC·
casionally. But I look at th e
statistic:s---0ne fatality for every million
air miles traveled-and feel better."
On paper 1\tarCall believes tttexlco's
l)avis Cu p chaMes are :r.ilcb without
Osuna , "But the rest of their kids may
ha\•e a reartion to tbl5 lragedr and go
sky high .•• beat \heir brains ou to win,"
he points out.
Roze lle,
KANSAS CITY (AP) -Pro footba ll
comm issioner Pete Rozelle said Monday
he hopes lo mee t within a ""eek with New
York Jets quarterback Joe Namath.
Howe\ er, RozeUe said he has had no
contact V.'ilh Namath and oo meeting has
yt'l been arranged.
"There are indlcaUOM we n1ight be
able to gtt together within a week." said
Roulle.
"At least. I would hope 10. He'• bctn
out of town tNew York Clt)'I, and I've
bten out of to11·n."
Rozellr. v"ho \\'31 In Kan.~as City f\fon-
day to porUcip1llt' In a panel discussion at
Laver Wins
Opening Test
At Wimbledon
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -Rod
Laver and Dennis Ralston , a pair of prcr
fessionals, won !heir opening matches in
the rain-splaltered Wimbledon Open ten-
nis championships today, already a full
day behind schedule because of the
weather.
Laver, the defending champion from
Corona del Mar, defeated NI co I a
Pielrangeli, veteran Italian Davis Cup.
per, 8-I , 6-2, 6-2, Ralst.oa, from
Bakersfield, Calif., triumphed over Jald.ip
Mukerjea of India, f-Z, M, 7.S.
Play began on nine rain-drenChed
courts after Monday's opening day
washout. The weather was uncertain and
there was a threat of rain.
Prospects were dim that the 64-malch
schedule coold be finished. Seven of '
\Vim bledon's outer courts were still too
wet for play.
Flags new at half staff over the hallow·
ed courts in memory of America's
~1aureen Connolly Brinker one of the
mos t revered of fonner champions.
She died ol cancer tn Dallas over the
weekend and will be buried there today .
Laver took only 50 minutes to defeat
Pietrangeli. The Australian has been Sul·
ferlng badly from tennis elbow in recent
•·eeks, and he did not play with his usual
authoritY.
He took the first set in 13 minutes, but
in the second and thi rd sets he double-
fa ultecl six times.
Ralston , the 15th seed, rarely looked in
trouble against the Indian.
The Indian saved one match point ia
the third set and then the: American
scored a fine backhand to take the ad·
vantage and closed out the match on the
next point.
Cliff Drysdale of South Afrlca, the No.
8 seed, labored for an hour and 45
rninutes to defeat Patrick Hombergen of
Belgium 7-5, 7-5, 9-7.
GURNEY THIRD
IN STANDINGS
INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) -Bobby
Unser closed in on r-.1ario AndrelU in the
U.S. Auto Club champiOnship division
standings by winning Sund1y's l~mlle
race at Lang horne, Pa.
Unser, the 1968 lndlanepolis 500 wiantr,
is now 415 points behind AndtetU, this
year's 500 champion who finished fifth at
Langhomt: and hu 1,610 points. Unser
fini!Md first in the standings last year.
Dan Gurney of Costa Me1a is third in
the gtandings with 800 polnU. Wally
Dallenbach is fourth at 660 tnd Jlm
Malloy fifth with 650.
Namath
the annual convention of the National
Association of Collegiate directora of
Athletics, also said Namath has not -to
Rozelle's knowledge -auempted to con-
tact the commissioner directly.
Commer.ting on recent n 1 t i o n 1 I
magazJne artkles rt>gardint the,Nal'ftalh
case, Rozelle sakl. "I didn't feel that \hey
were healthy for pro football. J was sorry
to see them. All I can say ls whit.bas
been written tt unfortunate."
Rozelle would not comment whether be
feels The stories have carried the cue to
a point where IL might be: dilficulL lor
No! No! Don 't Stop It,
P leads Battered · Loser
NEW YOltlt (UPI) -Jorry Quirry
camt. to pl'OVI a point.
And he proved IL He t"'.OYed u to him-
tell, be proved It to Joe J'rader; and he
prov.-1 II lo lf,110 worted bollq bulll.
al MadlllOl1 SqUJrt Omltn.
AD H did wa -him Ibo flCIJI. Peaplo ~ at him, whoo he wu
beaten by Jln>J11Y ICllll a 7t1r qo. '!'bey
aald Quany had backed •• ., from Ellll
10< moat ol',lbe 111)11 whlcll he had, and 1baJ Aid be wu no _.., a !tpl1malo
bea~lllhl ......... ,,,. \be dlle lbao.
o..tln Hollman. · ·
Maybe 10rD01b11!1 .lib· that dotal' mean much to you, but M 1Dean1 8 11"Mt
deal 1o Jeny"QUarry. 11 cot und<i hli •
akin bearin1 tt all of the time ao that
when he ctµnbed back into the rlnc Mon--
day nJJht Jn his eye-popping red mini-
robe wJ1h the while piping he was lookinr
to demolish Frazier all rl1ht but be waa
looking to prove his point even more.
He'd 1how 'em all -those who knocked
him, Frazier and even Elll• l!Wng there
at ringside -wbetber be wu a
ltgitlmatt= contender or not.
Jerry Quarry never took a blckward
ltep all night but by the end ot aeven
rounds his face looked Uke a rare him.-
burger without onlon1~ and desJMte bill
_plea to let him .1lght "ju.It one more
round" Dr. A. Harry Kleinman ended the
contest.
"No .•• no ••. don't stop it!'' Quarry
•bouted, le1ping from hlJ •lool toward
the center <if· the ring when Arlhur
Mm:m>te, the Hleree, ""11lled It WU all over.
Mercante •hook his h e a d sym.
pathetically but wun't about to chan1t
his mind. Nol after having bad a talk
with the doctor.
Quany appeared heatlbroUll and only
a few minutes Iller wbln he taJUd·to the
pre11 he unwittingly ~•led bow v1ta.l it
had been for him lo provi hll pilinl.
"I didn't wln the nlht but l 1ure u hell
can say I tried," he mumbl~ "and the
first . man wbo come. to me and 1ay1 I
won i pl In the ring ind flpl can come
and see me became J llti11 1« .ome left
in me ."
Okay, so Jerry QQarry proved his
point. He won the baWe.and lost~ war.
Even Elli• could aee tbat from .when be
WQ llttlnJ:.
Bat Practice
Pays Dividends
For Halos, 5-2
Five 1tart«1 for the California Angtls
took ertra batting practice before Mon-
day night 's game with Minnesota.
If the momentum tltey built kadina; a
14-hit attack cont.lnue.:!1, the Twins could
be losing ground in lhe American
League's We1tem race.
The Angels jumped on Mlnnnota
.starter Dick WoodlOO, who turned them
away po thrff bltl the lut time he faced
tbem. la Minnesota last week, to poat a >
% victory Monday.
Toolgbt, Tom Murphy dr1ws the
llarllng 111lpnnent for the Ansel>, risk-
ing a M record q:ainst Dave Boswell, 1-
7.
The Tlfinl will need a vldory to llay
Attgel si.u.
up with Oakland, which wu Idle Monday.
The A'1 host Ka'1IU City tonight, leading
the Twins by a haU-game.
Sandy Alomar, RJck Reichardt, Rot;er
Repo1, AurtUo Rodrlsue1 and Joe Azcue
wettl the starter• who took extra time 1n
the battlng cage. Relchalil.t and Aicue
went 3.for-41 Rodrigues 2·for-4 and
Alomar J..for-6. Rapo: wa1 O-for-4, but he
hit two deep 1hott that were outs.
Alomar atole the ahow when he I.led the
score 1·1 aa ht led off the bottom ci the
first inning with an lnalde-the;iark hamtr
to stral&htaway center. He stroked a line:
drive that ri1ht fiekier Tony Oliva nu.rly
gloved, then kicked to the wall, 410 feet
from home plate.
MINNISOTA CALl,OlllNIA
t'rlrlrw Mrlilnl
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Nearing .
Namath to ertr1cl!e hlmldf h'om tbl.
pooltlon he hu taken.
Rozelle Or<leml N1malh lo oeD hlJ In-
terest ln a New Y«k rm.urut-blr call-
ed Bachelor'• 111 -or be suapencJtd.
Namath retired rathtr than dl\lfllt hll tn-
ter.ot, but -hu .. Id be hopos to play
football apln.
''l'vt ••Id all ...... .. uld -lie,
"that I'm hopeful Joe will be pllylnc
football thll ran. I w•s iorry that Joe
N!Ur~ from pro footblll. I wouldn't want
lo .., AllYlhlnc abt 1111UI I talk to Joe."
Rozelle said r.e plans to mttt 1\lttdar
wllll lhe IOCUrllj< o(flc<n In his oUI« lo
1
"lie dldo'i' l!siit hll lllM." ..id !Dia,
Who-tlW•l!IL'. Ullo by boal!ol Quany
• year qo. "lie loolt II» lint """"' and looked pd.·.1 ·lbklk he obould'Ve gona
back lo hll old otyle, llart.movln' more
ud mUin' ,,.., mill more. Don't just
alt llmo and>lll. lhe M' hit you all nlihl
'lllll 11 what ilroupt about~ cut under
hll eyt and ""-'"" -all bulled up." ~. wbo -from-· c.ut., looted ai tf tocNbottJ laad ·CJ'Ulbed
all bll pelall.-the bout WU elided.
l'rular, .. llit: oilier band, had plenty
o( -ltll fa hll collar. Tiie ,,,..,,.. after Ibo ofllclaf ...
I
llOUftCfl'l\llDt wu made by JQMny Addle,
Frader started It 111 but he had the
stl!ldlng up by now, &Dd lhoUttd at bbn :
"You're next."
Ellis; seeing dollar 1i1J11 In front o( his
eyes, ate up the sudden dtallqe.
••vou couldn't beat me," he abot back,
cllmbtng Jnto the ring a. Frnler'1
hancll.,., pulled their man back.
Fruier started it all ut he had the
perfect match in Ellis, who -bow to shoot b•ck himseH. Ellil uaed to bt a
spannatV,!ll' Cassius Clay. Ht karned
from the mallet.
U"ITt ........ UNMARKED VIC TOR -Joe Fiazler, unmarked after beating Jerry
Quarryin a opectacular heavyweight war at MadiSO!l Square Gani..,
Mooday night, dbcu.soes his win with the press afterward. He will
now lum hi• attention lo WBA. champ Jimmy Ellis.
TV Rev iew
For 3 Savage Minutes
Quarry Was Champion
For three savage minutes Monday
night, Jerry Quarry was as close to win·
ning the heavyweight championship as he
will likely ever be.
It was round one at Madison Square
Garden and you had to go back to the
1 lth round of the Sugar Ray Robinson-
Carmtn BuWo rematch to recall a more
t-xciUng round of fisticuff•.
About 5,000 wert watching the 40-foot
screen at the Anaheim Convention Center
*"""'"""""""*"' EARL
GUSTKEY . .............. .
and when they weren't 1houtlng en-
couragement to Quarry, they held their
breath, wailing either for Quarry or Joe
Fruier to be rendered unconscious.
Surely Jt had to happen. Every swing
wu a knockout punch and it seemed ·u if
it was a one-round fight Instead of a 15-
rounder. Jn tbue opening moments of the
brawl Quarry had the decided edge and
at the Ume thtre lee.med to be • abade of
timktltJ to Frailer'• attack.
Tbe seeood round was equally ferocious
but with FrUiu picltine up the tempo •
bit. Bui by the third round FrUier had
taken the fltbl away from Quarry and for
the flnt d""' the Onnp Countilll WU
ducldna a D d alol>l>ing blclo atead o(
Meeting
be apprioed cl raceat dov•lopmenls in tbe
c ....
For bll part In the panel di""'*'" on
•bether p<oleulanal and colle1i1te
alhleticl can C().f.J..lgt., Rozelle said :
1'W1 will lin toclther beca1111 n must
live totetbtr. We've had good evidence
over the )'tall tba\ we have bee.n able to
work lo(ethtt lafrJt well."
He ctted the areu or joint ventures tn
the bulld1na of new atadlums, setting llP.
U1ht oecurlly to protect a g a I n 1 (
t•mblm' «<\tad> and fighting pay
televlilon u w1ya tbe proa and 00Ue:1es
can work more closet, lojether.
swinging.
By the fourth round it was apparent
that Quarry WIS puncfied out and th.at
barring a single knockout blow he would
be overwhelmed by Frazier, who bas to
be the finest conditioned fighter 1ince
Hurricane Jackson.
After the seventh, when the TV people
were showing $low motion action of the
round, you could hear a sudden roar from
the crowd in New York and you knew it
was over.
He had lumps sod cut. all over his
head and he put on a show of protest at
the stopping of the right but he was a
beaten fighter and he knew It. tn the final
analysis Quarry was devoured by hls own
distaste for training, p a r t l c u I • r 1 y
roadwork.
His physical equipment, uvvy and
taleijl were the equal of his foe'• but he
simpiy wasn't prepared for 15 rounds' o(
Joe Frazier.
Quarry said before the fight that i!1he
Jost lht>y'd have to carry hlm out~ It
didn 't turn out like that but for thtH
rounds he gave it his best shot. Af!er
that, there warn't anything left.
The. only shocking development of lhe
evening came about during the pre-fl&ht
ring introductions when Sugar Ray
Robinson, who normally &bows up 1 at
the!e affairs in a pint or ireen tuxe6>,
wasn'! introduced by Jobnnit Addle. I
I
Jt Wit perhaps bo.llng'I fJ.Dtat nie~ll 11 yean antH moments after" the I
wllen the WBA '1 cbamp, Jlmmy Ellis,
]limped •P on U.. rill ,,... ... ollrjod
taantlng Frater, reeopbed u eUmpl!lli
in •ls 1tate1. '
Fruler ru1ltf:d at Elll1 l• a rldlcal4n
dl1play of lloopl1 lhal ....., l>ope wtll Jiek
., the c•te for .. upected .Utcll
between Ult pair. Jt •• dlll ldid ti aidf
)'IMI aee at the wmtHq matdtu. j
In the midll of •ll this IWirllllf aolhlty
was Quarry and you bad to feel torry for
the guy who hoped lo win big but o611
looked game ln showing he 'll never mAe
it t.o the top. I
For thousands of nights t.o come i
d1y'1 first round w-111 illuminate
shadows o(Jlis memoriel and be'U dr m
of those th minutes -the punc
which near(1 won H all.
For Fruitr, it was a n I g ht to ·rbe
remembertd only u another co~t..
For hit!\, there w'IU,be others because tJil•
guy lovta to fight and thtre 11 no ~In
""11 -Shor\ ol Clay -Who <~I him.
---------------~-·-----·--------...... ----------------------------
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Qitarter ll_orses
, Ru~ T.onight
U. Alamitcil ~ Count _. Ila iecond nlJbl
quarter horse metting tonight, wllh 10 ouUtandUli
sprlnlen -rw!yio clull,llJ IJI• !taturt4 ~.ooo lnaucural
· at 350 yards. I
Aloo, Oii tap for Ibo seventh evmt Oii tile nin•nee
card is lhe nr.t nice to be ever run around a turn In lhe
19-year history of Los Alamitol. El&'ht 11routers" wW
negotiate the Vessels Sr. Coune of 870 yards.
All In an. the lint race Is scheduled to get under
' way at 7:"45 p.in., wilh tlie popular nigllUy double
wagering to be conducted on tbe first and second nices.
\ The Inaugural cpenlng nlrbt drew 10 swill stakes
J'Ullllen, Cind.,. Leo. ud Top Roclurtte, !be nation's
top three-year-old gelding and !Illy, respectively, of
1968.
• Also i.J\, lhe X•••lll"'1 lillouP· are Go A Mile, Dlvi·
dend'J 1111f, .~in, \\Jin ~.n, Sea Nympb, Mackay
B. &tar, Go Derusta Go, Wlnlitoi Stn!ek ·aiid Ettabo. •• Kilweah Bar,' ll!M "hone o! lhe year" although
only a tlv~yOIU'<l!ci at the time, peHed up the Inaugural
and Is schedu!ed to contelttbe fl,000 Double Bid at 350
yards "S9turday •nlgllt.1 •• ' ' . ~ ' Fri<J4y eveitln( :an outstanding field · of tw<>ywr. o~s clash in the $6,000 Leo at 3SO yards.
\ I• '
. ., '
. I:Qs,AJami~Qs
' .. :E;~tries
SICOND ltA~ nr'll1. l ye1r
oldt •rid w 11 Gt• A l'lvt.. PW• ., •.
~ Tld f'#ri.til)
Tni. """"" ($mlthl Doubtt ~ty IW.tlOlll
Tllh' WMtl (llltll'Vl
N.t!Mfl Oemtlt fAalt)
Go H9or'tlert Go !WllMHll
T~ Ncl!M (0 ltllkt)
C,.,., Sky CICMlll
~r (HH!I J ... 'I.._ (L..._I .... _
I iii.tit Ground (2 C.rde.11) ~· R. ...... I (ltnoW..I MllJ "'-(1 C.,.._I
T~ CM fly (Jl~J
TMlltO •M:a. 3Slt V9ftll, Maldtf' 1
-.... "'" 11'1 c:.iw. ,..,,... 11.ot. .,_,,... O MtlrJ Ut
Signups Set
For Softball
R<gistralion ;., -being held for 1 girl&' aoltball pro-
gram. sponSored by t h e
Newport Beach P 1 r t 1 ,
Beaches and Recreation
Dtpai:tmeat. The program is I orgmiaed for girl& in Newport .
Beach In grades three through
eight.
There is a fee of $3.SO for
-11 girl regl.ottrin(, which
i,1 will cover partial cost or
.1 r uniforms, equipment a n d
"'' awards.
r,: Re:gistrati()n c1n be com-
'I" pleted at Mariners Park.
Newport Harbor Community
~·· Youth Center, Ea.stbluff Park
" ' and the Parks, Beaches &i:
. ., Recreation Department office
•· between 12 :30 and 1:00 and
5:30 and 6:00 daily.
+ Registration should be ccm·
... pleted before June 30, For ad-
~ dltiooal information, contact
1,.r Mariners Park, 6 4 2 • 0 4 I I ;
,,, Newport Harbor Community
.,. 1 Youth Center. '1~-011 S:
Eastbluff Park, &K-0190 or the
t-in-recreation office, 17W180.
... '" ,,.
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SIXTH •&ea. Mii ~ t ,_., ....
•1111 • 11'1 Grwle AA ~ l"vne .,__
C'l'llJI .... lic..tltl 117
"" "-' ··--· t17 ~ D1i11 !Mtlt) 117
11..,._,,..I Miit f..,_) t17
l.tot9 0. ""' '"-"' 117 "Ir«~ l~J 117 OOnlt .. Ched IH Cn*rl 117
s.lllr', """' (Ca ..... J ,,,
--M9l'll ,($M1'11) ' 111 ' -sav•'"'-uc•. t10 .,.,..._ ' ,...,
...,. Mil ""· ~ ,.,,.. .... Cllln,ll'lf HU USll.
1t1ril111 Hany fAdtlrl ,.,.,...,., lllcult fl) ...... ,
I011"1'1 """' IL~I Ill-NtcC.w lflllllYI
""''"'" Diii ,...,.,_, llr M ir 4¥e9l't'Mltll c .... 11 ..,.. o·-1
.. llflo Mlldlli IJI ....... ) ............
ll'lll9'1 Jiit .. , IH C,..,.l
"' "' "' '" ,. ... ... , ..
'" at•MTM uc•. • vt• ' ,...
... '"' ..... All-. ,..,,. 1111 .....
llAI. """" ""'· Geo ""'"' llllflf'l9o'lll 0 1'11111!1'• .... (""""' ClrdW l• IW•'-l T• Jll!Cbtt9 (ICMlsl
lll:ob!ft Allll rHr!\911 (Ill: tril) SM M'l'fl'llOft llttrtl
M9cU? • tt1r !""'' Go Duorvll• 0. ,.., .. ,,..,
~lltllftil StrMll 1111:11111-l
E"IM (~ti
"' "' '" '" '" '" "' "' "' "'
"' ...
"' "' "' "' '" "' '" ...
"' m
"/ I
'I ~. , , 0,, oil -1 ...... r!"' If ....
'l ,....,ldor ....,Id bo tll(lf>lly 1-
thon your left. 1 "t.:iz'.~jH ~,on downhtll smd
.. ' . ....,, oodtloo yourofght ohoulclw
"' •a ~fl ~;ah--,,_ left (No,
" 2), llllowlll-r:ol"""""
• """"' ... "' and wll -,.... .. ..... hooltl>y .... ., ........
' • SC icrff GI' top fho thot • .
. ,.
;• ~···------
LA Seeks
'7SSuper
Bowl Tilt
111 RON l!V ANS
~ .... Delfr .. lilt • ...,
IM'~. the slit o1 the
fll'lt Su'per ~wl 1ame, ls ac-
tively campaigning for
another crict al football'• .-·~ matcbup.
'l'be Jauclller could be beard
all tlle ••Y from the Eut Coutwben anJy C ,000 ahowed
up ·on· Jin. 1s, 1111, for the
llnl -..1atlon between the
NFL and IJL.
I,A'1 "Sports Clpital of the .
Wcr1cl" mantle w11 rocklng
precarloully and people lo
~ Ulla Gf\!tl1 Bay ...,..
even calllnc It • butb town for drowfnl only C ,000 to IUcb 1
coawevtnl.
But U Bill Nicholas, tht
Collsemn'a General Manacer,
bu anythlnc to AY about II,
IM Aqeitl will have <o opo
portunlty lo redoem Itself.
"I doo't think we'll pt the
prpeforll>Olherthneyun
but we have a cbanc:e to get tt
qaln," be told the DAILY
PILOT.
Tutldoy, Junt 24, 1964 . DU.Yl'UI' ]f,
Season for McKeever.
By &AJlL GUITKIY the NJ'4" ba Wd. "He «o' 'tom Brown from °'"'...., ,......., ''He'• ahiraya ltrUCk me, u Green Bay and J auppoH: he'll
Former USC All-Amu!cao ~inc kind of a ~It py,". play -Ude ~~. Thal'•
'lfarUn -...er. M 1 McK•..r put In his llrit p tO •help us bt<aust "our
Newport Buch lkdllrbker, Ls aeuon wJlb Wuhincton lut , ov~rall deleue wasn't good neartna what be 111)'1 will be ,.uon .it<r ploylna out bUI · iut year.
bit Jut ......, of pro footboll. opllpn wjl\l the~ Vlk· "Our stro~g point i. our
McKo.,v, It, 1 rulclenl ol · lnP lht l.uOn before. Ht pusihg I~ with Sonny
.ae.coa Bly, reportild laat a(afted hla pro career by put-Jurgenson. think o u r
week f(I' \ a f=pre-Un. In aiJ: aeuons wltb Ult receivers ar aa good as tralnlac CW'DP mee d •Raw. anyone's -bby MltcheU, _. uicl rece!Yen the In 1117, ht was traded the J=y Smith and Charlie
Wublngton lt.edllhw. Vlklncs for Hall Bedlole llld T•ylor." ~· .
McKeever'1 lut_ 1euoo ln Tommy Ml.!Kn. McKetver ha ~.llfimarily
pro football promllel to be .. Under Lombardi, McKetv.r playtd tight end In ·u;;; NFL
evtiltfUI oat under new kloks for an improved auon but he says he may wind up
Reds& COlcli Vince Lom· -at leut ooe better than the playin1 some at linebacker
. bardJ. 4·10 Wuhlncton po ate d this season.
· ~1'11adn't met him since ht last yur. · Pro football has b<e!i l>jnd to
eame 'to our club but I've 11He'1'made coe trlde that I McKeevtr -he'll leave the
talked to him maybe two or kODW ls to1nc to help us," be game with no regrets. But the
three tlmel since l've been in JQ'S. great years were 1951 tbrwgh
1911 when he and his lite twin
brother, Ml.kt, terrorlaed foes
with. the art•~ look.alike comblnaU~n the pmt his
e~ known.
Mar1Ln wu an e and Mlk.e
played l\l&rd. Topther, they
were rated bluedllp prospects
by every NFL team. Thel)
Mike was stricken with a head
Injury •114 doctors told bhD
ntVei to play aga.in. I
Marlin became tbe Ram(
No. 1 draft choice of 1161 and,
on 1 hunch, tabbed Mike as
thtir lsth pick.
Marlin proceeded With his
career a n d , predlctably,
became a regular with the
Rams while Mike rooted from
the sidelines, separated from
his brother on UH: playin& field
!or the llnl time. ,
~.-11>o.i.o
polr IA Dotombor, Jtlf. J0M
WU IDV'Olved in ID auto
llllllhup In l!'ountlila Vllloy,
rema1ntd in a COft\11 fer a
year....s+hall .ud' died two
years ap. i
'l'be l)llo of the -.i wtU
newr lu:ve MatU:n but ht'• cooUoued with both his loot-
ball CltMI' and bts .... fl"'
deavor, that u a ltoddlroker
in Newport Stach. ' ••r wu a flnance. major at
USC and th!& f& rey -prol .. slon. It'• • d1111cult ....... reu100 to punue if you want ..._
to double up as a pro footmll
player but everylhlnf f& wwi<•
lns out wtl1 for me now."
Cardinals
Smother
Rival, 9-0 _
. '
The Fountain V a 11 e y
Cardinals butball club will bo
seekinc it.I HCOOd ltnJlbt win
Sunday at Loo. Amlp High
School when U,. Cardo bolt
lbe Slota Ana Ancell at l p.m.
The Cardinali ttarted their
string with a t-0 triumph over
the PlacenUa Merchlmta Sun-
day at lei Amigos with M.lke
Bailey leading the w•Y with
two twme runs to rttbt tltld
that accounted tor four RBll.
Coupled with the u.blt a~
tack WU the tbree-hlt pftdllnc
by Jim Mall, Dennfl ~
llld Jay Stanley.
l"OUNTAIM VALLIV ltl
Mtnllltll. If
Ounk~. II
BffWft, 311 """'"" .. B1ll9y, 1•
1811.M•lt
J I 1 t
I I I t
' 1 1 1
I I I I
J 1 , 4
I f ) I
••we bad the '17 game wlth a
two-yeor optloa on. If al1er
thaL But altar all tbo1t
lawlUlt& •tarted Dytn1 over
the TV blactou~ the NFL look CALLING A PLAY -Martin McKeever, a Newport
it away from UI." Beach resident wbo will begin his ninth NFL season
Remember? When the Nn.. tb1J fall with the Washington Redskins, sells some
announced the sruter LA business to a client over the phooe. McKeever is a
stock broker for Shearsoo, Hammill, Inc., In New-
port Center. He says next season will probably be
his last in pro lootbell.
Wolf, d
CM'lltMa. D
l!llw, ~ -·" CM'rnkf\MI, rt
' 1 1 • I 1 I I
J t I 1
l • • •
I I I I
1 1 I I Miii, '
area woukl be ahackled with a ----------------------------------------
1-'!Mlt'I ••
$1tnlt"f, ' Tollll e • • • ~ J II t TV blackout, the screams ol
1gor11 were eventually chan·
-Into the coortl -lltia•·
lion whlch bu •Ince -thrown out.
Two COllltum Commilslon
members. Warren Dom and
~ Hahn, joined Loo
Aqelel councllman John .....
raro and the mayor bbmelf,
Sim Yorty, were the ludcl
lo 1 otorm ol crltlcilm.
Needltss to say, footboll cornmluiootr Pete Roulle
wu infuriated at the ba.ule
Ind look hil pme lo MJoml
for the put two......,.,
Nut January'• game is in
New Orleans and Nicholl•
11)'1 be th1nU Dallu will have
the im aarne.
'"nlere was • blackout in
Miami and New Orleana will
have cme too. Miami didn't
bellyache about It uuf 1 doubt
.if New Orleans will."
Nicholas ls laying I h t
IJ'OW)dwort now for a cam-
paign to brina the Super Bowl
back to LA. He wants tbe
couseum CommiuJon and city
councD to go on record as ac·
ceptin1 another blackout.
Nlchola1 pardon• the '67
gata by pointlni out that he
had 1eaa than 30 days to prt>
mote the iame.
"We wtrt the guinea pig
that yur -they didn't an-
nounce where the 1ame would
be until le11 than a month
bef<rt the came dale and we
hardly had enough J.lme t.o pr·
int the Ucketl, let ak>ne prt>
mote the came."
Area Stars
Stand Out
In Surf Meet
Baseball
.Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EulDf-
Won Lost Pel GB
O!lcago 43 25 .132 -
New York 36 28 .56.1 5
PitUburgh 36 33 .522 71\
St. LouiJ 32 3S .•71 101'>
Philadelphia 26 37 .413 14111
Montr<ol 18 46 .!31 23
West Division
Loo Angeles 40 2! .606 -
Atlanta 39 21 .582 11,;
s. Francisco 36 31 .537 41/a
C!ncinnoti 33 29 .332 5
-36 36 ,11(11) 7 Sao Diego 26 47 .356 16 11.i ,.,.....,... "-"' St, Lou1' tt MolltrMI, rtllt
°'~ J, ""' .......... 4 ._ .. "'"""" $, Alll111t ' CIM111111n f, ,_,. 0 .... f
HtYtton t, totfl "•.-.ell<• I
CIJol"f Ml'IWf tdlodulllll Tflf,f'f't .. _ "1"111u"""' (lul\lllnt MJ 11 Clllt••t (HttMll M l Sf. Loult !Olu1n J.51 11 Mon1re11
(SllMmtl'I 3-f), nlel\I
'°1'11i.dt!Mlt (F!"l'mln 6·! •nd Jdln-
illl M ) t i New YCll'tl /SNW!" lo..l 111d
MCAntlr9W t-21 , t, IW~l\ltl>I
I..•~ ID<'YMMle J..ll ti Alltnl1
/lll:tM 6-J), llltltll Stll I>'-(knli0'1111 M) 11 (lllCI~
111n Cl'lt,... !-1), 1111111
s.11 l"IWK!KO cMcCorrnldl 6-ll •' H1111i.. (oi.riler f.JJ, "'9hl
Wflllllllllll'("I llt-
.. h!ltdtlph!.I ti N-York, nlttit
SI. l..""'lt f t Moll!rM1, J, tw~nl•M
"I"*""' t i Clll~o Lot Al'IM!ts 11 Atlenl1, 11)fllt
S.n l'r~ et .._,on, nltolll
1111 Dleto t i Clf'ICIM111, nlttit
AMERICAN LEAGUE
£.1t DlvlilOI
Baltimore
Boston
Dtlroit
N"'York
Wuhlnston
Cltvtland
Woo Lott Pel. GB
51 It .'129 -
39 2& .600 t1h
36 28 .563 1%
34 37 .479 1711.z
34 37 .471 17%.
24 40 .37111
W es·t .LA Bowlers
Setting Pace at E lems
A couple o! West Los 1t1onday nights.
Marlin Hooked
Y..1r. and Mrs. M. G,
Hartman or Balboa Island lan--
ded five marlin in a recent
fishing trip south of La Paz,
Mexico.
Angeles bowlers conUnued to Only two Orange Countians The husband half of the
set the pace at Kona Lanes' are to be ~ound .•m<>!lg tbe top team landed four I I s h ,
West Coast Match Game 15 .-a unique 11tuallon_ for the" .,.1 .... 1 ..... 145 13% 122 and 110 Ehms. Normally, the flnals 1 • &'"''fi • •
Eliminations Monday nl&hl have been half.filled w!th pounds while Mrs. Hartman
"1..ACIN11A Ill
Zetldl, If °"''"' d -... &ldllt .... '' Hl.Olrl .. I•
lwntt. ,. ,,.. .. ,a
l'IOllitft,,,.
~., ...... (.
Mvnot. rt
ClfT, ' 0.WI",' Ml"'--• -·· Tlf1l1
... ' . ' . ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' • " _.,_
• •• • • • ' 1 • • • • • • • • • •
••• "l'°'"IJ.9 DOI GOO ....... :r I l'oul'lttln VIiie¥ .. •t ,.,_, lJ t but Reseda's Lamar Keck, the counly shooters. \~. brought in a JIU-pounder.
defending champion, p u l __ .;_ ______ -'-----'-------------------
hlmstlf in chall•llilni poal-
tion .
Dale Glenn, for the third
straijht week, retained his
lead by rolling an 842 block.
Roland Alexander is just 21
pins behtnd alter an W 1et.
Keck, bidding to become the
fint to win the tournament
two stnlcht years, jumped to
third plaoe, 80 pins off the
pace, with a slzzllng 195 effort.
The field will be trimmed
from 120 starters to the top 60
after next Monday night's
session.
The htgh roond of the even-
ing went to Mlke Seaver or
Torrance, who posted a tlS.
He leaped from seventh to
fourth ln the standings.
The top seven spots In the
standings remained stable but
from eighth place down the
juggling ad continued.
New faces in the top ti ltJ..
eluded Bob Probert of Garden
Grove who moved from ltth to
loth, thanks to an able plnch-
hll job job by Colla Mesa's
Barry Asher. Marty Anderson
of Anaheim promoted hlmWI
from 22th to 14th, contlnuin&
the advancement he'a
dla:played over ~ past three
Foothill Star
Chooses USC
Chip llurn~; o1 Foothill High
High School his sigr.ed • llate·
mtnl of Intent to enroll at the
Unlvefllty of S out h e r n
Cl!Homla In the fall
The freestyle ace from
Foothill WU leCOnd in tht 200
and tOO frees In U)t CIF tw:lm
finals lut month ifter leadlnc
his males to the Crutvtew
Ltll(UO cbomplooshlp.
Fumlu nam 1 1:.t&.O In the
200•nd1:47.1Inthe400 for hi•
uc;ond11loce eUoru at the
CIF finals.
Now!Buy
Seagram's 7 Crown
half -gallons
and save $1.10.
From May 1 through June 8011De0
you pay only $11.89 for
nch lh-gaOon of 7 Crown
in•t•ad of $12.49.
Don't min this big •Ying
on America'• favorite whitkey.
~ .......... -lo 'l•• ..... 10.)
Say Seagram'• and Be Sure.
'
•
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HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES F~ SALE · ~ .:.OU111 ~OR ~E ' HOUll l POR IAkl ,. HCIUSU FOi SALi HOUln ,Oii IAL I .HOUSH 'OR IALli
, .. -•I 1000 Goner1I 1000 -•I 1000 0....ral 1009 Coote -, n• Nowptrt ~ 12111 ~~~~ jj M,'f Hunt!'!.'-' ...... 1~ ,!
•-PO-O;..,L-TA_1_u_ NO FINANCE Exciti1MJ 1av-t El~:~":" ~!m~":.,, S-.~ '°,.,. a..c11 FHA Resale -:(;u.~1 "7 :.I' ;-_·-:Sac::, --liiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiliiiiiilii;iiiiiliiiiil:miii; iiii. iii.!iiii.ilil
Been lookin& tor a· plact to CHARGES . TNl.Y a fine ho,:;.e for the~-new, ~·it.h CATHEDRAL ICU=~~ ~r Y91'!_ " ' · 1 "UI" ONLY 2 HOMES l!! .. put'onet Heft: 1t 11. Bet.Lr ~liW. 2000 llQ ft di!~ CEILINGS!!! Saw $13,000 :: l,ara: ~Ci\'1': U151nio. pays all. s BR. 2' 1 I . '
Uful famib' home in «ctl-OWNER wru.. CAR~="~ for 1.rac~ livfn& and e~ in interest ~n thil cbeoertul IN'c 1 .... ~ .......... -_ ...... ,~ bathl, 1arKe family J'OM)~ Lot + &It Bay view.-~ New homes, reidy ·~ mofe ln, ·~·\:! e lent. IOcetiorf with ~pan.~ TRUST DEED for QIMULU'OU tttta~. 4\ bedrooms pNs GARDEN KrrCHEN home .... t:-'Y •• .,... .. "''"'~~ country kttchtn with eatitlc "bedroom. S blU.. 'J'5xl2$• fot. M!
:U s 20 loot rvmpttg room to tieyer ,1600 sq. tt. com~ely 3 baths. Large fonnal d~ with deep'~~ carpet.I in ftl uloua ~e '::t ~ ..,.j;; &ftL Ne~ DlOdel home room ·tor boat 1'..,trallet. ~ beach. Finl payment up to 80 Yf
ac:()Ornodate ft&Ul&tioq size arpet!d and draped home. room to get of! a mus1ve gorseow hVUll room with ~\JNTRY ~ 1 Z E f).i1b' carpeted I dnped, Delta Real Eslf.te MMC.t • a1ter move lo. 1 pool table,-plus. plenty, ot Larae lMng room, thtft bl"d-dining room set, Modern mauivl!' FLOOR' TO CEIL-""• "1" ,.. budb -in.~ 4 disbwUMr. 1-n;..,;;;;;:,;;;-;==--:c:"°"-f '1f'IM VA/FHA..· FrMt $22,9'0.
room Jett over for erUoY1'1': rooms, den. dining room, 1* kitchen with sepf,nl.te eating ING FIREPLACE!!!! Kirtg. RITCHENpWJ.out with tree,.,atandlrw: Nev IChooll. Only· $28,!m. OWNJ:R S _NE',¥ 4 BR. • ·
TV and ,._ h t bath. Bullt·ln ltill!hen 1i1.•ilh _...,e a oven ,.. .. , , "''""llSl H · Harbor View ffoml!' 3 .. _.. CORAL SHORES u"' mammal s one area. Pool sized lot. $6.),9;i0 sized rnastrr ,bedn>o. m.!. PlU· HARDWOO. -0~ FLOORS•. 1 .,..,: .............. '""" en tare ReaJ . • -... 1 I . , tlreplaet:, Laree bedrooms, breakfut area, large cover· VATE DEN Th11 hpvy ..,..... Ealate (open ~) liv nn, din rm, fun rm..
2 ·~-n" ~~-bat~. din-f'd patio with outside sink · · . tra 1arp R-2 k>t. Doublt: bar 11 Jdt. 2 ..,..._ w/w (on Garf!•,. between ·•·icb •-u--oUi ~ 0-'" Jhako oove1'd bea•ty ~ · ' .,0 .DOWN· G.I. ....;, .;__ y-.'.l~. 'M•-°"' "" • --ins room and 5'1'JMlr&le room and built-in bar-t>t>~ue. doo· NEAR T. HE BEAO:I!!! F. ut ~~~hedR·A-°"AN~_!.; f' ..... ,.. .... _ &l1I ··-v
for office or nobby. Assume ble garage, fl'nced r e• r pouel$lon available•w 1 t h r•c." c. G).lN .!i~ n.c.n. 2 s6ni ~ 2 hlltb on R-2 lot. extra: 6.9 t I n a n c I n·s . 9. 6 2 a .1 J 5, 3
low interest 5% % FHA Joan. yard, beautitullly landse&J>-TOTAL $229 per month in-iow' S25E .'sooo&:LtLOO%%ApoHwOM•!!E! Room 'tor another unit: Can .54&.1281
Payments of Sl83 per f'd, iprinkler!!.' BEAT THE eludes taxes. ~ pUttburd FHA with 1ow, BL°"UFFITT;;>.5;-_-;3;-;BR.;;;--;3-:;Bc;A
month. includrd everything. ~C:,H LOn:J,E~ils ~~ WE SELL A HOME EVERY J1 MINUTES low dOWn. $25.IXIO. w I Bay v I e w on wk1e C0r.nai del 'Mar 1250 H~I-'-luch l400
------------· --
So•mH "°"'"'""""horn< EVERY t i MINUTES Walke" & Lee _ ... ,c ...... ., pool, .... -. on our iluarallll'e AAles plan. Jor appointnM!nt. I t.'ufl. addition&. Ste a I OCEAN .VIEW
WE SELL A HOME Walker & Lee -n-~--~ t••---™·"°· OWner -. Choice Cm>na'llJchJandt LIST your-"" EVERY 31 MINUTES -*'""'~"'"~a ll&fUll 1---.T"R"E"E"'S"H"A"D'°Eo;D;<--3 BR. 2 BL You own the with clftftJl1nct
Walker & Lee 2790 Hubor ~i at Ad'""' Open 'di 9 PM BEACH HOME Jud! .A "'°''at 1'4,0lliJ. SlbL with ,...,. ..
20U WestclUf Dr.
·~ml Open Eves.
RIGHT BUY
BUY RIGHT
Ownl!'r just bought this home
OM week ago. His company
transfe:r fol't't"I sale of this
terrific 4 bdnn family'horne.
Giant rear yard for boat,
trailer, camper all at ODCe.
$28,500
Newport
219L 11111
t:venings Call &45-8723
8 UNITS
TWIN 4 PLEXE S
COSTA MESA
LARGE 2 bdrm un1um. unit!
Good carpet. Built ins, hard·
V.'ood cabinets, 8 prages and
generous private patios: Jn.
come $l(Q) pep mo. Pric'l!'d
at $88,500 Oli\'nel'S wW lake
a reuonable down .•. can be
aold as 4 or 15 units.
ALSO AVAILABLE
"Fo< A ,.,.,.. ...,,,.. HORSES HORSES Lwr-.S Jhar ......... CORllH.MAMIN aioftel tldll
( I .... & ( Open 'ti! 9 PM Extn ...... 2 BR • faml\ll -beam ceW.. • ~ 1'fltDUGH 0 eswo ••• , o. ·UDO .. II. rm bit ..... oNI,· ~le, • ..... ...... 3 -2 -E. Cotat """· OIM YOUR • h ab PIER & SUP BBQ -w/!rple. + •la· Ba .... $32,500 • ....,.. --..-;;;•;;;• '15-='!ll!J-;;;;;;;;·~-R'ALTOR MIM.llR
-642-777T 10 n macn • BR .• 3\! baths. Near ""' .... ._ 131.l"J,. Call BAYFRONT CLASSIC CON· • 'OCEAI< VIEW • Huntl..,... ...... ,
$17,500 FHA Loan Spanish on 2 Jota. Walled Glen Queen S«J.llSl Htti· TEMPORARY 3 BR mme 9 .-..old Luak 3 BR. 2~ FIVfttliin VaHey
Auumptio<t MEDITERRANEAN patio wlil'. pool. Sllp '"' ta&• a..i Eltata (open'""'' with pier and slip: 1139,500. BA homo. Crpb, bltn,,, del>, Multiple
$136 ~·r Month Total Im-iw C\lltom .... ia.. 50' boat. CU.tom quality REPUBLIC Home, S moa WALLACE J.... NDT, Rltr. ~ rm., 2 frplca .. Newl.y Lftfffttt. Strvia r "' -
2 bed-m r•~-..... ..,. thn1out nf9 500 old. 2 &tori. 4 DD 3 BA, 67S-1Sl!O lndtcpd. By owner. 644-0&ll or 11. '"" home adjacent to Dover Joo ,.. • .:.. __ ' ' u.... n;;;o:;;;;:-::===='-=" 8 home with CARPETS AND Shores on choi~ comer. ~· faro rm., retreat nn. S car lMMACULATE DUPLEX 2-3 LGE, hilltop loL Penn. view F". M.
DRAf'.'ES, rw:ar ~hooh .and Spaeioug livirll room with ......... garage. Mesa Verde Cor BR. Cornrr, close to Lido of ooea.n I: hills. TARBELL CO.
shopping. \V1tb Just a little beam celling• Formal db; Jot; $43,500. By Owner. center. $49,500 • owntr will Realklr 613-2010
cash you can't afford to rent. in&: rm 4 ~ms family $46--WIS finance. Principals only. lo ;;;;UPLEX,;;;c...,_,,. nr=-. ::-=•n:-.s"B'"R'."'2 1ll1 a.ach llvd. ~y~~ ~ EQ~"';:'~ nn, with liroplau ;.,., we\ (Allnell, WW & (o: MESA VERDE ''""" lot. 3 .....,,. BA + 1 BR-A bo. i.-. Jot, '4Z~I _
LOAN'' W .t when ~· beautiful mast~r awte 550 Newport t.nter Dr. )&. BDRM, 1% Ba, family "M"'o'"B'"ILE,.,-.,H;;;O°'ME;;;-"°119"'."'ooo=-~ Rltr m-2010. 5142 Ed'-r ltvcl.• · · ~ mean 1 with separate drea1ng rm rm. F\illy crtd & drpd. 2 Bayfront on Peninmla "..,.
we say, "RUN, DON'T Steam be.th heated & ru: Newport Be.ch, Cellf. fWplacu, cowml patio, 675-&08, 615-3226 L ..... lale 1151 146 °'°4
WALK" to our Costa Mesa lered pool. m.soo. 133-8700 644-2430 3068 Clbraltor, CM. ;;Cho;::;:. ::<p=""""""=""' I ·;;;~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. _.:;H:.:":.:".:;''""°"""~,;llo:,:.,::•~·h=~I o~~!~~!~!~ A HOME Call for App't.. l"'T.~":"~~T.~--1 !111~·900~~0wne~~··::=~ .... ~-~ eo::. ~ ~: CASH &UYERSI OLD HOUSE ILUES??
EVERY 31 MINUTES M9sa D.i Mor * BY OWNE&-POOL. 3 StiOOl dn. .... -5119' LOANS! Lut ,..,, at thla time, ......
' ,
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1 •
l
I
I
I
'1
' I ..
' I
I
I
t
I I
I " Vidori•
646-1111
Anytime
16 unit!, 24 units, 60 uni1s
WALKER AND LEE
MR. LEVINE
Income Investment Oepl.
50-9451
W lk & L c7J4) '42-12JS Low Int.rest L01n BR. crpts, drpa, X·Lr& LR. i"'=·======= Sharp 2 Br. I: fam. $55,000 q -our Record >"ttk. we
a er ee 901 DovN~"",,.· acSWhte m You an tako.ow•.lllb 5111'. Low nwn*· ~~•""'.' Newport Helghll 1210 ($23,100 Loan> mid 154 ho.,.., W<',.. rolnr ' ''!!!!!!!!i!i!'-!!i!!~i!!!"i!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!l loan at only $149 per mo. _..., Charm 4·BR. A den. $619,000 to top that reQll'd durioi' the j
Hane ·Cauntry
Back B•Y
Keep )'OUr Will' and your
horse happy • Over ~-acre
nestled in upper Newport
Bay. Neat and cl!llll 3 bed-
room doll houst:. Plenty of
valu~ here! Cheap at $34,950.
Seller says: lie will carry
a big chunk -if }'OU wan1
a loan '! \Von't lasl. Call
now!
645-0303
1111\l\I 1111\ll\
4 IEDROOMS
No Down VA
Thll is a quality hollle with
cement driveway & shake
roof. Only l yeart old. Sell·
er will pay all buyer'1 clos-
ing costs & 'viii give you
$100 to move
~9521 or $40.4631
J. K. Nichols
Re •ltor
OUTSTANDING
Lido Isle valut" featuring ~
l:Mnns .• :? baths, lge. liv.
rm. \Y/frplc. Lo1s of quality
pluses such a11 red tile rooI,
copper plumbing, new dish-
~·asher, ('lc.: At S65,000 and
wilh this location you needn't
look further.
llDCJIRPEI
REALTY
2025 \\'. Balboa Blvd .. N.B.
C•ll Anytim• 675.6000
lmmed. Possession
3 BR 2 baths ,fircpla~e, rar-
pets. drapes. built-ins, dou-
ble garage. $23,T;iO.
W•lls-McCerdle, Rltrs.
1810 Nt'wport Blvd., C.~I .
548-7729 anytirn(
Frenk Cort•••
1617 Westcliff
Newport Bt•ch
You arr the winner of
2 tickets ID the
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR
at 1he
ANAHEIM
STADIUM
on July 4th
Pleall(' call 642-5678. rx1 . l.."9
between 9 and 1 pm 1o claim
your tickets. (North County
toll-[ree number i1 ~122(H
2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams I~ Beautifully ftp! 3 bedroom BY OWNER .. Low interest DUPLEX 4 )'rl old. 2 BR ($29,fi(XI loan) last week in lune. Call US
56-9491 SOLD YOUR HOME? 2 bath bme. Superbly Jocat. 5%-61ii% trg tra.nsferrable ea.ch. Buttt·lna, ~. drpl. LIOO ·RIALTY INC. now. to yottt home can be ·\
Open 'tit 9 PM Need IOfMthinc I a r I er! ed to all llChool.s. churcbel blns. All 3 BDRM'i'. 2-E ~Owner. 6"4 6-2 5·10, UOO Via Lido 613-8830 M! ot the lucky ones. '
iiiiiiii .... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol Makf. this MUsr SEE! 4 and maa:nificeDt South r.out side, 2 w &Jae:' 548-11159 Principals only. I '!:~~~!'l!"!!!!'l'!!'!"!:!!!' WE SELL A HOMI ' 3 BR. $18,950 ~;.~· !k. ':"=. H': Plau. 64Call5nowo3' 03 2'00' • rm hi!me + apt • Newport Shores 1220 ~:.:~r.:u~L!~. EVEIRY 31 MINU'l'IS '
family room with wall to • pool. 138•700··= Santa Ana BI' din Wa ker & Lee' pJa A,,. "-'"' ...,,.. ,, • ., _,.. FOR SALE ~. ~--3 new c:pta:, I, in& nn. Adult stttion of Hwit· wall fire ce. Formal ~ ..... ......-........-, ~ .. , u-w11•=~ Showe ldry 1 lngtan Bay Townhouse Inf ro6m. Electric built ins. BY Ownu!• 4 t>dr. e~ Bedroom, patio, ian&e· U . t ~.~ . nn. 1Y2 EdiJWtt
area. Adjoins pool & New Cai,iets & D r a p e s Freedom ~· coqi& 1oL Co m m u n l t y pool A nrt · a ....... ...., • terms • U2-4455 or stl).51.fO ~reation racilitiell. throughout. Assume I o w Moving, 64(i..:9178 ~ves.. playground, 2 blks from $1~,~ GREER Realty Open EVH.
\Valk to excellent shop-FHA 5% 'iC loan and $3,000 ocean, Newport Shotts. 242 · ' l
C I M... ,_1 .,.,r 1 0 Lu-nla, NB 642-3286 33..'"'6 Via Lido 673-9300 · $21,500
ping. omplete y car· d\~~'"·handle. GI no money!-~~-~-~~-u. ,... 1 5 "v LOTS DF ROOM 4 BR 2 bath, shake niof, I peted & draped. Dining ... ~ G I,_ Oppo tu 't \VATERFRONT By Owner.: il in ~ & di-" l'aom. Assume 1*''~ WE SELL A HOME ouwn r "' y 142~ 4 BR 2" Baths Cuttorn quality 3 Br., on 51' but--nge oven, ..,,. G.I. no down. FHA mini· ASSUME ........ . 7¥ • Jttte:t 'to 'ltrfft .Jot. J ear washer,' fireplact, M!l'Yice
loan \l'ith rotaJ J>3Y· EVERY 31 MINUTES mum down on the 4 bedroom 5,V.• 010 LOAN 1'1any extras. 421 62nd St., porch, double 1arqe, car-J
menl!! or $159 p e r w 1 k & L plll.5 i;·amily Room. A ttal .. 11 NB * &C-3869 aaraa:e. Lee. South patio: pell drapes IP~ 1
monlh. a er ee sl~per. Det>p pilr. carpet• 4 bedroom ltlesa .d!I lifar ----nr. dubbouse I: 1~1 eta. walk to schOO!s, near the 1•
1~ Edinger per·brick patio off family with raised littplace, ser· COATS wall t wan throughout. Su-beauty. 11uge family room University P1rk 1237 ~~E~Rfltyor.a.;;~5200 ~an. O!an., 1
& 141·465 or ~1).5140 room. HU&t Lot! Many more vice porch., fenced yaid. N!\v .. JUST IMAGINE BAYFR.O~ Home + iD-., ... MESA VERDE WALLACE l-~~Ope~~" ='Ev~'=''~· ~-!Xtru for the-price ot outside paint. $311500. living ln th! luxury of • S come, finest beach loc. '\lmrT!PTll:lllr' l
REAL·TORS 5 BEDROOM $24.960. HURRY ! bedroom, 2 beth townhou&e N!Wly tumiRhtd. Salt GI' • h • -
Channing '°"'" hom•. 4 -S4Ml41-· WE SELL A HOME In lmm~'"4te ooMltlon. ""'""'" ,.,tafi, Xlnt """ *CREAM PU~
BR, 1%. baths, lamlly room. (Open E....U.,.U REST HOME EVERY Jl MINUTES Lowly side yard for child· owner w/ carry. 67rN24.1, .-.-~
Interior & exterior paintl'd Present owner has property w lk & L rcn's play area. Back patio 673--0305 Assume this 5%. ~ FHA b.n.
Jast year. Intercon1 • 1tereo-""'!!!!'!!!!'""'""'!!!!'!!!!!"""""I re.nted out u a .rest horn~ a er ee overlooks rreenbelt and pool. UDO 2 . Ba ii. den. At. $15q mo Pm. 4 BR, 2 BA, ··1
phonic radio, A~l/Fltt &:. BIG & DIRTY v.·ith an annual income of, ========='I Do most or your rardenlng tractive Owner wW carry fam nn. F.P., F.A., drapel, ;'
phonograph. Cuardstone 5 Ddrm. + Pool you \\-'on't believe it. hut its 7682 Edinger Mes• Verde 1110 with a .water hose. Priced larie ban 7%% $47,500. new crpts. Built-in ranee" ~
smoke & fi~ dettX:toni, in-• $9600 per year or S800 per 841-4455 or 540-5140 at $'l!l,950. Phil Sull\vM. S48"'7&l ovtn; diatrwr. O~door Ba.r· 1,
!ruder alarm, M\I' hot \"a-$30,000-mo. Th(> price • $28,500 • Open Eves. ASSUME 5%.% FllA 3 BR 2 • d h·11 • t • 8-Que on cov patio. Cot. Jot ~
!er heater & garbage dis-This 2000 gq ft Bar Harbor \Vow~ 1 QO/o Down ~ ba, bit-In, fam rm' re I Hunti~""L1ch 't400 w/ ~t gait. Nicely ~-I
posal. $33,900. home needs sOm! paint g. c i. ts Id rps, I mm a c. , ~ped. Orana:e ~· $26,950 JEAN SMITH, elbow ........ B•l w)uot • $34, 950 8'aotlful patio horn<. owe llHutiful•Tr~Pltx By Owner, MJJ656
Realtor bargain. Owner says sell · Sha,.,...,it horn! in back bay 2nd TD-su54b~i.!e~· REALTY Just ott Beach Boulevard TRADE YOUR HOME •
FH V ·1 bl . ...-~ 18ai8 CUJver Dr., ltvine "°" to -p•-. ' ·t ·~ •--~-, of how much • j A or A terms ava1 a e. area Owners have moved • OPEN 9 AM-8 PM 833-0820 •• ..,., u11. ~ .. "" ,..., .... .....,. ~3255 Call today. ORANGE COUNTY'S im~iate possession • 3 BY OWNER • 4 BR. N!"'·ly t!nant. make your PAJ· equity YoU have, on this •
L.ARGEST bedroom & Family room. dee inside I out. N"'v crptJ.. E•itbluff 1242 m!nts. Income Is $365 mo. !Uper &harp two-story, with 5 Bedrooms·
$184 Per
~lonth INCLUDES taxes and ORANGE COUNTY'S
insurance! Can't heat this LARGEST
price on such 11 large home 293 E . 17th St. ~94
\\-'ilh 2 "Queen" 11ired ba ths l iiiiiiiiii9!iiiiiiii;!i'iiii'I ~~h ~~~· Only Sl,200 ,,~,,-~ ..
WE SELL A HOME ' '
EVERY 31 MINUTES
293 E .17th St., 646-4494 Beautitul covered patio -iD-tile tJf 'in tam nn. Drpil, Electrihouo BlWISomt im~~~Ui winding sta.irCut leadirw: to ,.,
tercom thruout _ Pool siu trplc, bltn1. 1740 sq. t l e NEW BLUFFS e throul: e •w•ult1tt, 4 Ma.stet Sized Btdroom1. Br ig~t & ChHrful yard $26,500 Prine. only. 3253 2 Br, 2 Ba split level. Many Priced to RD at $35,SOO. Balcony ovtriookinf formal · 10.,., .. St. 56-6448 Submit your terms to dining room with thlc:k sbq will be this lovely large lt1rsa custom features, all eltc, WE SELL A HOME ,.......,,1-. sw~ .. 1-tire-)
Verde Colonial home in a BY OWNER etc. ~st main!. 4 lease. ~.......... • ..... ,. \
k I h Id MUST SELL By EV,ERY ti MINUTES plau,o<try$5,00>Downa"'
\l'eC or 50 when compete CUSTOM REPUBLIC HOME 0 . • Walker & Lee takt over low interest GI ."'! redecorating will be com-OWNER. C'.all Dick Byer
pleted. 5 bdrms, dining & $46·2313 • 646·7171 ON BEST VIDV LOT OFF-533-4456 ext .fOl or 673-5117. loan. Aikin& $35.500 SubmlL -
fam ily room. Anlhony pool . !;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio I ERED. 4 BR. 2 BA. SING. WE SELL A HOME 1• LE STORY DES I G N EASTBLUIT: 180" Vi!w, 7682 Edinger EVERY 31 MINUTES ·,· farm styl• kitchen -elc. V•· B/8 ' PHONE ""21'4 2'00 ,.. ft, 4-Bedrm + 14-2-4455 or S40-5140
c'1nl about 6/26. Open to .,,.._ · W lk & L " of!C'rs~ LOOKING? =BY~O.~,,.-,-.~.~B~R= .• ~l~..,~ .. -. 1=1.· 1 study. By O\\>ner: 6"-05n Open Eves. a er ee ~I
\\'e'll Lind It for you! Jusl vacated, cl!aned. 2 OWNER'S vacant 3 BR 2
4 bdrm pool home lhal ~ S.6·5810 LI STING? Blk11.. Adams Scho ol . Coron• d•I Mer 1250 bath. 5%% FHA. loan. 7682 Eding!r I j
will M"il FHA/VA or lt1t1rtm.nlttlelhe) \ve'll sell II for you! library. SALE $32,500 or $120/mo • $22,950. Open to l.i2-445S or Sf0.5140 1
ronv/ comer location llEGE REALTY STOP in and see u1! T1\·enty lease $770 Mo. BAY VIEW oH!n. 19802 Isthmus (nr. Open E~. , '
1n quiet nei&:hhorhood, ISOJMnsitllldlor,CM. ye11n experience in New· 837-9491 or 833-2914 UNUSUAL DESIGN Adams k P.f a g no Ii a)
Walker & Lee PDOL-$33.950
2<>t3 \\'estchff Dr.
646-7711 Open [\'t'?'.
4 BEDROOM
MESA DEL MAR
shakr-roof, quaint arch· irt Harbor area quality us 536-4558 RARE GEMi SI. OWNER 3 BR 2 ..... Lovely Broad.moor model lteeture. Only $33.950 ASSUME 6•'o liCl"Ye you successfully: · u.. Villa Paclflc Condornln!um .,.,,11h VA / FllA t·-·'. /I B & I h carp!ts/drapes, trplc. l'lec· horn! w/beaut. bay&: ocean 4 BR, 3 BA, lge kitch, ·ram. 1 t 3 BR model _, __ • ""~ 0 N ay eac . • ··--l ·1y rm w/lpl, fully d'""''d l I Ot'Y • UUM' -Exclusive Ii.sting ! L A tric blt·ins. $25.800. lj98 view. uo.u•..a., am1 rm., .,. to pool lots f extraa, kt-Ja l Enjoy Jiving on a quiet Realty Inc Myrtlewood. 5"5-6446 21Ai baths, extensive land-cpt"d, den, liv rm, dbl gar, • o 11:treet. Beautiful ash panel· VA loan at no cost. no chp, ', .'. scapir:ir. Gnuw:l winner in a patio, aha.de prden. Make swne exbting 6%9' FHA --
ling in living & family room, no change in rate. Vac. 3 & 901 Dovt!r Dr., NB Suit~ 126 1200 national de!ign competition. oiler to owner. Call 847..alll9 loan balance $23.150 • .$23T ....
hit-ins, frplc. nice lge hack ram rn1. New 32' htd pool, 1."',.;.'!'7000~1l":~:"E'l'"'~'~· :'l"8'i'i:-6966~ 1 .;;N;;1;;w;po;;;;rt;;;;B~a:•:c;,;h;;;;~;;;;, I the home featurt:!J vaulted aftunoon or eve. monthly JMlYI an • i. 4
yd. Good Cinllllcing. 1000' brick decking, 2 ba. 21'-----CDME-ceUin~ w/h!avy beam con-1-;;a•AR=E"'v"'1"°" ·"'P"'•"cwW.1c" Price $29,500. ' 136 """ HOME & IN 2 UN ITS 43 d ST "" : .....,,, · PacWc .. ....._, R•·'ty 1860 Ne,\-port Blvd .. 01 years young. ,.,,JOJ. r stniction. Just S min. from 2 d """''" ..
MUST SELL Rltr. 646-3928 Evt!. 644-1655 ' P.W.C. 546-5440 The one you·,,e v.•aited tor! Cose to beach l: channel. tht ...... " beach. Fashion 4.!!"· : .. "::. ~·-~m 6g:[•Fl!Ac/ ·. 536-3894 or 1547-8536
B R I 0 -tirst to sec UU!l dup!ox Good · • · ~ ""'" .......... ~ -,,.. l h arreH el ty ot; vacation income. Js!and a: San Diego Fwy., 962-IMO
;; bdnns, Ji,; bath Baycn-st ac enmyer BEACH HOME in best rental area. dose 10 Lot "alUe is near ukina: with all of the amenities ======-=-=-7' VACANT home built by Ivan \\'ells. 2.sty. 3 Bdrms. 2 Baths bay & ocean. There's a hap-price of only $23.00I. ol the small communib' CONOO?.UNIU~I l BR, cpts,
\
I
' I I
?.loving East. Make offer. prt 5ents ~ CHECK THIS , ...•.... , ~ !! py fulur" here for someone! 9: ... , ~!·SH$6.5lR,OO)E .RCaJIEALlocESTapApTE"t. drps, n:fripn.tor, blt tn'1, Out of town Owntt. J·BR l~ tt Amold & Freud FIXER UPPER .. FURNISHED ....... $25,00>! AU ,., $'8,500. Call now! >;I ~ 117,00>. iJ0.231' .. cpls/d<>o, bit.Im, ...... ' l
3118 E. l7th SI., CM • P•rk·Like Priv•cy CAYWOOD REALTY ~ ~Jl'4.W, • 6Ta-2503_ • t ·_-1-0-W!--S--1'--H-t-' lot. FHA or VA fin. or cash
Jteoaltors ~ii.JS Channing: Newport liflitM5 ma1.'lliate 4 bdnn d -bath i306 W Coast J-l\\-'Y NB. 1 I A l T y -GOURME"'""uEI!. ~,s1,4,:, )Gan. Rush! f-:;:==:=::======1 1
' block from Cllff Drive 3 Baycrest home on a quli?t ·541-1290 ., ·-.,.._ 0 D.&-SR¥A·"R""R"EA'""L"TY=chc.+--I' Bedrooms. lamil,y room + street. Invitingly light & N('ar Npt. Post Ofc. 646-2414 Al'! al )'OW' elbow, even when ~ EA
NEW HOMES tl<'n. S26.!IOO, spacious. Unusual ln-law·l "'N~'""~o~'""'""'""o~1"'l 2025 w. Balboa Blvd., N.B. hubby brlnp home the un-.TIME FOR 847-3531 E\.'el, 963-1178 ;
Eutside Costa Mesa. From \\'II . d 0 own (111 Anytime 675-6000 BAYFRONT Pi10BILE expected.-\Valk to Five POOL TIME IS HIRE. 11 -arrangement. e pnce al HOME Crowns or Don the Beacb-$28.500. Only 2 lelt! 3 BR. room 1rnngrm!nl. \Ve 11 G If C A , ba ,_, Healed & filtt:red Antbon;v ,.
OPEN DAll.Y priced at $65,9'all. ~ bdmi + family room. $183 o ourse re• 2 Br. cabana, 1~1 , .. t"c, cober, ttlax with a •troll pool. super sharp J bdrma, .i
2348 Santa Ana Ave. per nio pays all or J."'HA or Lovely lai'ie lot on cul-de-sac. avail boat slip, adlt section. aloog the ocean bluU. This QUICK CASH hardwood floors. fttshQ1 . .,
Ukt. 23 rd &: Santa Jsahl'n 546-2313 • 646·7171 HiOS \Vcstclifl Dr NB 642.;;,.?0Q Conventional. 1 bloi:k fro~ Club House, Community dubhotm, pool, Poppy ·~ ,em is pric-painted inside I: out. Bel't \
642.J960 Eves. 6'12-5106 I ~!'!!~~,..,.· !'!!'""'""~I $11 950 pools & tennis court of MettJ game area, etc. \Viii trade ed at lot \'&Joe. ·$74,900. • arta. Cil or FHA terms.
OWNER
AtOVING Ir ANXIOUS
AduJt occupied 3 BR hontt~.
~"EE & MAKE OFFER.
DAVIDSON Rao lty
5f6-St60 Eves. 1)42.49;11
IEACH DUPLEX
2 Bachelor UnitJi
Xlnt loc1tlon! $29,950
George Wllllomoon
P.EALTOR.
EVN. 61J.156t
WESlCLIF F AR EA
. $2',411
4 Mttoom. 2 baths. i.uXUt')'
bUDt-ln kitchen, ntw ~fril·
fftWI'. Room lor podl,
54().11:10
TARllLL 2tSS H1rlror
DAILY--PILOT' WANT AJ."Sl
!
and ~~!=~~o~~!ame $151 Per · Mon·th RAND R L Tv :._ 64S-2340 ~Ie6~.c:~11', Ouh. Only ~m0rLadogu~ f~~~ ~o~~ ~·~.p=~:.A~~&a THROUGH A ~'T{,~Lu:t:iLTY "1
l his lge 3 BR home, with Includes all on lhls 3 bedroom NEWPORT HGTS. ~ 546.~10 or hillside Orange Co. 842-1418 Anytime .J ~]~.; ~~'::'.' ~ ~n::.~_ec::. ~ce1;: Lovely a!!~·=ck>us bed-o~EGTRE~'f!t llorn~l~"i'"':"~"T°'l"V"E""-Spae~~s:r~ ~~·~!.ry. DAil. y PILOT DOWNTOWN .;
at S22.SOO. npportun1!Y to a;et your first rooms, \O,.'ood burnin&: fjre.. ell)MINlatH.ni.,CM. DUPLEX rrpl., 2 Ba., + 1tp. houat: 3 BR with added den. o.. " T
f'ORTIN. REALTOR hon1e \\'1th payml'nts no place. Copper plumbing, 2 I for income. Corner Joe., 2 ' tachrd 1arqe on alley ·,
1701-A \Vestclil! Drlvl' m<>r!' than ttnt. Won't laii't car garage. Mature trtti. l"'"'!N~,..,..~Schoo~-~"!"1-"-"'-t.ae. 2 Br. 1 ba. fl'ont un t R.J lots. Owner will finance. WAN.J AD bea tUul la .... _. · ! Ne:1i1.•port Beach 64UDXI long al such a. low price:. f>o».l7'20 urH ry w/modtl 3 bdrm. 2 ba. rear u ·-~ ~nl· •
WE SELL A HOME TARBELL 2955 Herbor POTENTW.. 3 BR 2 bath unit. Beac.h I~ & an xlnt $69,900. ral &oc. Leu than '2J. &:
2 DUPLEXES
On adjoining fee lots. 2 BR.
f'A. apt, Nr. ocean &: ~.
Total priee S105.000.
B•lbo1 Rtel Estate Co.
700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa
• 673-4140 •
W
EVER'rJ!lk lll&INULTES EXECUTIVES ~;,.,..~ u':·d~~:."" ;PR'ci'Pe~f."E1 ~~~~ :~~°:st P~ •te IUl!'rl tR': L.'~,:°'~11y .. '•
a er ee \(J21! Ba>"lde,· NB 6T....l\30 .. ,~, "1·2525
"""""' to N ....... Bcoch. llanla lltalty 'FRESH AS A DAISY-. HARD TO FIND $143 .Per Ma. Tot1I •\ ().! New Ivan Wella' quality But \\'Orth the dfortl llroad-20U \\."estclllf Dr. view home in Dover Shores. 642-6500 And Re~ For You $22,111/6'% LOAN • &ts.mi Open Evt1. La 4 bdnns 3 ba tam rm. DRE AM LOCATION 3 Bdnna.. 21,t. ba. 1~. :.:. = 4 Bdnn., 2% Bvzaln price on lh11 iow ff
Ste models open daily at M0vt: Ln cond. Spaclowl 3 mt, poeea. rut Vlsla L8rcdo. OPEN DAIL'i l-5 l BR 2 bath ln'\fety dt!llr?.-r'I
SV<%.G.I. ""'•Uk>n Home OUTDOOR PARADISE '''""''· $30,900. 546$00 llOYD REALTY Deloney RMI Est... HAFFDAL REALTY 0
CON~18!iroN CO. 1430 Galaxy Drlw. 646-1550 2 BAj "'1:1tcHff sl'lop'c areL A beat buy ~ $37,900. 2'700 WA'O"ECREsT able AJR. ~•I
Sll9 Atontb pays a.II, R-2 lot; BuUdert $2 3,500 BUSIEST marketplace lft 3629 E. Coul Jtiway, CdM 2828 E, Coast Hwy, CdM ff.au Wamer, F.V. 842-44 'i ~~~C~~~ 646-2G29, @) Beat 1~ heat in the large town. The DAILY PILOT ""='"""6=75-=5930=,,...--673-3no , 2 BR. 1 ~ BA Condominium q
cowrf'd p.atio • Cucadirc Clas&lfied 5ec:tion. Saw DON'T JUSf WISH for sorne.SH ""o"RECUFF===c--1;-;BR.;;;--.2.-;;B.,-A. Lrf pool:, low mafntena ""·
O\VNER • 5~ 'i J br. 1i1.·a1rrlall il BBQ, 3 big ~-money, time I: eq:ort. Look thlnl to fumlAh )'OUr home Quiet tnll!I lined area b7 the On4' 3' unit.. Cal ~ /
Twnhlt. lt.B. S107/mo • roorm, lll't'pl!lce. F'Ull diD-naa·!!! , . , find irut ~ tn fO. set.Fecstmplt.A('Cftato2 lot· 111pt. 5S...J26I •1
p.l.l.1. bit-IN RIO, n!f ""'""~!!"~~~ ... ~I 'Ill room. $t>rinklen. 540-1720'1"o"'AJ"L"Y:;-;;P;;fLOT=","vANT==-:AD=st da,y'1 O&s&1fted Atls. beach!-. Under $l0,000, By 53&-3:19& n'tl Mr. Smltlt :n
'"'hidey. rtt, tacll . 347-106'/ at.AR.GE tT! TARBEL L 2tS$ Herber BRING RESUL-1J'S! "0'"1.t7-:6'2=.s611=-1'"or-,,RESU="L=TS IW'llft". * ~ DAD.Y PILOT WANT AD ••
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'Houses ,011 SALJ: 11£~~.s · .
i . ltumllhod Hunll..,..'8Mdl 4'111 4fh , . , a.n-l•l•nd 2"5
IENTAL5 Hoo-Unfurnt.htd Goo•·-3100 . FROM M ' '..j :il.. , )' l . l;;;;;;i:;I;'· ;;;:;;;· ==~
PAGES.' OF A . 1.,lii. Yr" or wn1<1il~"'!' BIG .3 BR·, ~n. ;13 I "1-3371. or
DE CORA TOR mm""""'·" .
Iii 4 2 bath.I ., funll1 room. Ex:. MAGAZI E ~ant~ An~ Ha19h.1a 2630 '"' d<an wtth ""' .,.,,,....
dl"aJ:IH " bullt~in kitchl"n. That'• whe1': you'd e>e· 1 !IDRM furn hie .with cot-Gttat taml!,y home! S2'25/ ~t to nnd ~ ouuit_anci; nl. ~I llli pa)d, Ut.S. ~ mo. Qilldrtn OK. c A LL
Jae 1pecil.I. hOme decorat-546-0347. • MO.ll51 Heritace Real Es.
ed b)" one of America'• tale (open eves}
foremoat designers, Haml Summe.r Rentalt 2910 !"'~·~· "1-!'!"'~'!"'~!!!!!!"'I
Ut.on-Howe. Thb brand t-IARBOR ~S. 2 ... ~R u~~f~taintdt ~.t.
new J., bcdroom1 .tarmerf.. . BAYFRONT ......... ~·--a ..,,°"' model home is really Placentia 4. v e . , CM.
"turped _on',' w:itb deq)n.., 4 Bdn-n. I: maid's; pier & 646-5837 or call (Tl t)
tor dHip extras like exj slip. Avail. JuJy A Aug. 496-38.lJ
ptnsl.Ve Spanish l 11 ~ $2500 Per month BDRM 2 " ' " F noo"' •·do~••· ,., o o d Dover Sho .... 1 B•yfront 3 • :ea .... ""'"' am. C" Rm. Pool I: malnl new cpl wall treatment· and paiw 5 Bdrm•.. pier slip.,' avail. • •-""ilt · ~· 12 ,....,_., uu ·lllS, ut11C,
eHna:,, built-in boo¥.c~ August. ,000 sprnkl. $300/mo. GU-2718 wall paper with a wa*1p. CALL~ JOHN MACNAB
carpets, draperies, huh REALTY CO, 6'2~ SMALL l BR. cotb#, ulil
•--.. ··-.. .i. .. i;1... furn. Eldttly cpl or mkldle .... """"apin&.,, 1.,..-rs, 4 BR on the 'water, sandy ~ llidy. $125 mo, Call aft and.air ~t~. An-beach.Newlycar peted, wkd 64.2-3216 other adQoo pills_: you dra~ & -fl!n'ished. m 5 p.m. a.YI .
can waJk ·to the/beach. wkly.:.July & Auaust. 3 BR'home 11~ baihs, 2 car
Near everything Di: New-6'13-7449 . g~. covered pat Io.
port • Balboa • 4'10. Ex· 1 -~TERFRNT=""-----~0 $2'.Xl/mo. A.Kt. 5f6..4141
cellent, finaoci~ avail· \VA , pier, 6 t ========= able and a sw:prUingly stepa tb -~an. 2 or 3 BR. Newport Be1ch 3200
low Price of jUl!ll $34,990!' . Sl25 per ""k I. u.P.· tolD _.....; ______ _
W<>11;t last ~~1-mo~ River Ave, NB. 673-8Zll
in now and avo7 the IWll"' CLEAN Balboa Beach Unita.
mer at the beach. 963-1997 Sleeps 2 to lQ; for aumnier Bkr. · I· · reservations Call ·613-9945
' ~ 315 E. Balboa Blv .• Balboa
BY OWNEft -ill•Bedroom,·3 LIDO Isle Bayfronl 5 BR.,·.f
bath, tlrepl-.ee. near ba. home pier It allp,. July
achooll.., ~ 96&-57S3 for &. 'Aug. S~ Per·Mo ..
appointment. Principals -BROKER 67U830 only. . \ f '
3 BR., rumpus mt., 2 ba.
Huntington
Har.bour
Sips, 10. Lee trees, N'pt.
1405 Heighls. SSOO. month.
a.eatUre Real Esta~
'1>-2503
DUPLEX avail/July l , 3 br,
2 ha, bltM, incl. dshwshr. A:
trpl. l bk>ck from beach.
673-1158 or 1213) 242-9378
3227
3 BR fam rm 21,2 ba, VU,
tease, ref, avail J uly l.
833-0104 or 213 04-54(8
Eaat Blvff 3242
FOR Lease or sale. Bluth .f
BR. dininr r o o m , im-
maeulate end unit, Va.can!,
· $390 mo. G'lt>-5764 or 673-9060
Mn. White
RENTALS RENTALS
Aptt. Furnished Aph. fumlshM -. Costa~ 4100 L1gun1 '6•ch 4705
DAllY '1LOT
* * * *
. lllNTALS
RENTALS
Apts. Unlurnl&hod
Costa Mn• 5100
AplL Unfuml ......
Huntl.,..on Baach 5400
Exciting µvlng
Jn new apt1. 1 bedroom, 2
bedroom • 2 bath.
$140 1to $195
Swimmirw pool, om. sauna,
recreation room.
General E}ectrlc Appllanoea.
Adults oncy.
Lamplighter. Apts. """ Whadclya Want? Whaddya Got?
SPECIAi. CLASSIFICATION FOR
16102 Sprlncdale St. Phono ..,...,,,
2 BEDROOM 2 BATII,
FURN ISHED I
UNFURNISHED
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spoclal lta.. ·
.5 Llnao .-S.tlmft-5 buch Cpts. drapes, buUttna, best
location, 1 bile to 5 Points
shopping etc. from SUI.,
7101 Ellll, apt. 0. 642-283.S,
"'2-8303
ltUl..ES -...0 MUST INCl..UOll
J-W1191 'l'Wll "-'"" M rr.ot. ~ "°" wtftl II\ """ :a...TOUlt ---Ill\' .odrt'ff. +--.S lf!IH « ....... Ill. .......OTHIHO l"Olt lAl..f -TltAOl!I OHi.Yi
PHONE 642..5671
To PJtce YOur TrNer's P1r1dlM Ad 2 BDRMS •• 2 BAlH I BR 2 Bath Hil 117.500.
$150/Mo. HEATED POOL tumlshed or unfumlsnect,
lncd, cpVdrps, Kids OK double garaa:e, patio, fenc·
Delaware Studio Apts. ed. Trade ror equal val. ? T
2620 Delaware, H.B. 67l-4215
642-2221 anytime 538-1816 l'Sa,._n~D'°;.,.-,-.~, ~B~R~.~,-ba,_.
CHEZ ORO APARTMENTS month to month rented $175
1234 Atlanta F.quity S&.oo:>. Want local
New 1-2 Bedroom, • f1Y 6 area, duplex or triplex.
electric only Madge Davia RJtr &t2-7000
5.16-392'1 or 536-2721 Larae house + income + Pool-Washer.Drye~ g room to build, on goll
Private Garages course, Trade for free &
2 BDRM, l levtl Con-dear land or submit.
dominlum. Wuher/dryer, Madge Davis Rltr 6'12·7000
encl patio, all rec facilities. Will trade, Aug. Beaut home
~J.75 AduUs 968-1394 k. Burlingame w/3 ·BR, 3
NEW $150 up. 1-2..J BR. Hekt-BA. den, pla. rm. Spect
ed & sauna poolJ, rec nn. bay view, for accom. on
lleil ,& AJ&onquin. Mgr. Bal. Isl. Newport, CdM.
846-3131 Xlnt ref's. {415) 362-1212
NEW modern 1 or . 2 BR, wk days. S:31J..5:00
cpts drps avail July 1. Tax Sheller Needed: trade
536-2579 ' $25.!0> land equity in rap.
$900) eq. in 50xl40 Ro! lot
w/gd rented Me, next to
Carden Grove Civic Cntr I
llS. total val. $20,500. Trd
for unll1 or ? 547-6469 Bkr.
Retired-don't~ tu shel-
let. Want hae free &: cir for
flll M or S38 M eq in tri-
plexes. $960. mo, pool, prime
loc. no vac. 541MiOOl
BA YFRONT & dock, 3 Br.
3 ba, val $89,500. FOR T.D.'1
(consider lae/opt) or trade
for ??! No. 2 Balboa Cov.
l'S. Owner ~l
Free & clear. OreiOO River
& hwy. frontaa;e. 100 Ac, a:
up_ Val. S350 acre. Trade
for improved propert)'.
Mr. Forney Bkr 540-3862
2 BR. doll house k/hdwd.
floors, on shaded R-2 Jot,
FOR duplex or units. 1~' ON wattt_, 60' dock. 2800' CHOICE N. Laguni 1oc, • 2
cwilom design 3 BR, .f BR, frpJ.. gar, walk bch/
bathao $11:5 M.-il5 M' !i<IWn· town. Mo or w.lr; ff'l.11156 eve
(213) -~ ... 1. ' $30 00 wk up ·100 CLIFF DRIVE C d I.Ma . 32SO ' • Fo11ntii• V.ill•Y -.141 O BALBOA -Inext>ensive rot-orone e r • Day, week, month. Two bedroom furni&hed
SPACIOUS, CLEAN 3 BM
studio. Nu w/w cpta, drps,
elec: bltns, 2%, ba, ~t
area.' Nr Fwy&. AdulU-no
pets. 549--0412 eves &. wnd.!I
LG 2 BR 11,ii bat hs,
cpts/drps. Sha.rpl Close to
OCC & So. Coast Plaia.
$150/mo. Call Mr. Graver
835-4422 Bia.
BEAU'!' 3 bd 2 ba idly apprec. area for units
r. . · crpta, or beach prop_ Owner Box
drps, trplc, 2 pat10s, new a76 Tustin 544-3666 eves.
retrlg. S42-S705. 1'0\VNHOUSE 3 Br. 2"' ba.
LRG 2 BR. all r.xtru, pool Beaut. appl'd, Prlv. patio,
$139 mo. 847-1594 alt 6 pm pool; nr. bay, Val. $32,500,
wkdays. !or T.D .. car. camper or ??'
l BDRM, 2 bath, newly dee-OY.•ncr 646-6654
FORTIN, REALTOR
1701-A We1tclilt, NB 642-5000
Have Newport Heights R-7
Lot $17,SOO clear prime
area WANT dupltix, triplex
C.orona del Mar area
MATCHAM RLTY 64M83T
· r · tage1. Weekly rates July,· 2 BR House, excellent cond. •Studio Ir Bach. Apts. All Deluxe Features
August, SepL~158 Married couples & no • ~J'Utlls A Pbqne serv. \Valking DIJtance to Beach NEW, By owner, 3 Bit, 2% furn · e M.!00 cl-Mee. TV avail. S2'Z> -Yearly lease Bath, w/w carpets. drapes BEAOI at door. Newly children. S250 mo. * 6/:i-3291 • New tire Ir Bar 494-2449
blt.lck fence Many cos~ bach apt starting at S5D pu . 2376 N wport mvd. 548 9'ta5 ---------fN.t~. 13i,soo. Qlclid &. wk. 536-2S79 Htg Bch.. ~untlngto., Beach 3400 e · • DELUXE 2 BR, 2 patios, HA VE 2 Bedroom trailer
fabulOU! view, ju.5t steps to Talbert, nr frwy. 962-&fl9 PRIVATE room )\']th bath, 4 BR.' BA, bllns, frpk, dbl Newport Beech 4200 ~ h b k aep lrom m&in house. 1110 I I ~h "~ M •· ucac ' y w • or mo,
orated, private patio, heated Sailboat 38' roomy, fast
pool. 962-8!:&4 sailer. $17,500 val + older 3
10 x 50, $3500 cleat
WANT jeep, travel trail-
er, local income property.
MATCHAM RLTY 646-4837
Rented house, 50x140 R-3
lot. Nr. Garden Grove Civic
Center, $20.500. Trade $9.500
eqcy for units or '!''!'Owner/
Broker 5!17-6469.
L1gun1 1Se1ch 1705 to 9~3. m..ss.t9 "lar~t~m842-°2956_,..., o. =I SINGLE Yourig ldil1ti1 'Lux-1-----°'-'~!l<--7489--~ -===----..;,, ~""'T N I •· · • ··'-""'7''='7'-=--=-:,-1 o-ganl<n apts with coun-SINGLE Apt. In town, clean, IMM.AC, 2 BR, cpts/drps,
bit-ins, beamed c e i 11 n a: •
Quiet. Adulll. No· peta.$135
&. s1411. 1974 Wallace.
5 20 Br. hse CM, $15,750 val.
S1nt• An1 6 Want comm'! or indust.
*EXCLUSIVE * SA ... ,..,,..,.. -ewy .a.urruli;,,. _.... 3 BR, lam. nn. 2¥.a BA, .,, I b -~ ...._ and modern. No pets. Resp.
Beaut. pro-rty, new of-ed l ·BR. Finest ~ach oc. fenced. bltins, avail 4 lo 6 ll'Y c u •\l•""'P'""~"' ""rson. Perm. 494-4377& ---------prop In CM. 673-0017
HIDDEN VILLAGE Lotus Elite new yellow laq. ...,.. 675-J243 613-0005 complete privacy. SOUTH r-fering! R..2 Lndsopd. lot , mo. 53&-2004 eves. BA y CLUB APJ'S. Irvine at GARDEN APTS. new tires, valves &. int.
from Blvd. to CliU Dr.; 5 RENl'ALS· 16th Newport Beach. Br. home, . pui'eled L.R.' Houses Unfurnished fauntain V1lley 3410 ITioll 645--0550
wlfp\. din. nn .• 'tgi!. kitcb. l\riek'ed pta.Uo:Few mpg to Gtnertl ,. 3000
Diver'• ~· Sl~~ -fREE RENTAL BOOK
Temu possible. See this. we have another beautifttl 3
MARSHAµ. It; ROPP ~ 2 .Bath home tor
211 Ocee Aw. 494-lOZt leue' at it'79 pe"I' mQ!lth. All
eleci:J;ie Medalfion hdrne •.
,C ~ ,)c; den, W/vt crptg It AVAIL. )v.ly 11.L 1.a&.. 1
ceramic tile lhnH>ut 2alO blk. to ocean. $lliO Mo. Util
aq. ft. $275 per mo. 968-2550 pd. Yrly i.e. 67>160
t'ONOO. 3 Br. Deluxe crpts I --N,..•~wport.~~Bo~a~<h"'=Roal-='=7'",-
lc drps. Dshwhr. Pool. LARGE 1 BEDROOPif
962-49681 U no ans 646-0474 $150 month, yearly
••6~•· . 3Yl ACRES Anilable Jiily bl. ' L ··-h 3705
Undeve,loped land. City _ of w lk i ·~ ..• et.::.::c•g._uo;n;:•c_::.-::.:<;;__~.:;;l ISllboa 4300
Laruna. S .Blks. to ~ach". ,jl .,.r g '"'e N. e1'1pinnln1~.BR2 BA.t ~==----~.:.:I
Ocean views. Should divide :'f, · 'f · • ,~·1 rt 'closei'l,.qWet. Mature cou-1 &. 2 BDRM api.. $165 & · • '" • • 'ffl92 Edinpr · ~ • into 13 Iota. Price $40,000. 842'4ii!I or 5f0.Sl.fo . , !! pte or lady. No pets. Refs. $200 yearly. Anita, Jones
29% Dn. A real sleeper. -.-.... .,.._. $275 lse. 494-8109 Realty. 613-6210
MISSION RL TY. .f94..(1'/'n . rv)l'Cn .c.v~. BEAUTIFUL View-2 Br. un-i-;:::=::::· -.mmlFOR lease -El Toro. 2 story tuha year leue. $2Z per Ill ii 4 B~ t ba~ Wt b!tn ~2463 ft 5 9QP/~ LOAN k.itclifn, frii:lc , cov patio, mo. a p.m.
with 7%~ interest Oil thl.s teM!d yard. 2 car gar. Lagun1 Nigutl 3707
Lido Isle 4351
\VATERFRONT APT.
SUM?.1ER RENTAL -
RENTALS 2 BR Studio Apt, l dtUd OK.
Apts. Unfurnished refs. No peta. $135. Mo.
637-2943 General 5000 ;:::=;,~::--'.=,,...,,,.,,-=-3 BR Deluxe, adults, no pets. e RENT e ~IM. Sl3-348l or MI
3 Rooms Furniture BEAUT 1ge 2 BR. 1% ba
$20 • $25 & UP """"" pool, adwta. ms.
Month-To-Month Rentals 2310 Stnt.. Ana. 645-2933
WIDE SELECI'ION 1 BR, utll pd. elec bltns,
Appliances I TV'1 avail. re.lrig, no chlldren or pets.
No Sec:urit)t Deposit ~ before 4.
HFRC Furnlture Rentals
511 W. 19th, CM M8-3.f8l.
1.568 w. Lncln, Anhm 71.f..2800
VEN DOME
IMMACULATE APTS!
ADULT &: FAMILY
Me11' v.~de 5110
2 BR, W/W crpt'g, drape!..
All bltns. Near sh>pping
center. $135 mo. Adults on-
ly. SU.'3119
$155 Month Pill uW.; 2 Br. Wild looks, performance &
turn. or unfurn. Alr-cond., o/30 mpg. Want jeep, carry
IOl"Cei! afr beat, heale<f poOJ, all. P /U. or '!' S.16-5381
rec. area. 'priv. patio. North Tustin Lot, SIS,500.
QUIET LIVING Free &: clear, mo111 ex.cl.
~1525 area, fabuJous view. Tr. for ===-=~=~=== Inc. property w/spendable.
5700 ""'· '""""'· --------Will trada 1961 VW Bea~h Apfs. Sod•n for Bus or Van.
Coad al
New • Deluxe
(714) S-16
(714) 536-1417
711 Ocean A venue
(J blk1 \V. of H. B. Pier)
* 548-3821 *
·* *
Almost 1000 ac., '250.000.·
80 mi from dplwn LA. 5
min. from fwy OQ paved rd.
btwn Beaumont Ii Ot.k Glen
J'rd for '!'? 547~ BJcr.
Trade. 1939 Buick, or -
1961 Renault Canvelle for
Chevy Panel,
*
$400 value
642-5769
* REAL ESTAT~
General
*
5705 Income 'Property 6000 Office Rent•I 6070
beautiful 3 BR, 130• ocean Avah Juli 15 at $240 mo.
view home. Call now for de. 837-2103 aft 5.
tails. A s\'al .at $43,500. NEAR BEACH 4 Bfl 2 ba,
PERRON 642·1771 w/w cpu, lncl yd •. ~ "'""'""'"""""'"""""'""'"I din/kit combo., lg 1 liv nn UNUSUAL view, cust'. quali-w/frple. Bet l shop cntrs,
4 BR 2 ba, vi"' home. SECTIONS AVAILABLE
STUDIO apl. 2 bdr, .2 ba +
.lndry rm, patio. cpl!, drps.
Adults Slfill 546-1554
BEAUTIFUL Private office 2 BR., unfum., w/pool. INDUS. BJdg. 100% occpd. with bath. some ocean view,
Ocean view, nr. beach. $160 Nprt, Bch. 10% net return. in the Glendale 'Fed. Sav-
. ~fo. 528-7201 ext. 1 S 2; $190,000. Phil Su 11 l van ings Bida:. Corona de! Mar. Pacesetter area, S300 mo + Huntlngtpn Be1ch 4400 Close to lhopp!ng, Jl'•rk
util. 6Tl-9541 or~ 2 BR Furn apt w/frplc, * Spacloua 3'Br'1, 2 Ba
BEAUT. View EXCL 3br 2 bltns, 1% blk to ocean. * 2 BedroQi;ns
499-2803 eve. :>48-6761 $75/mo. Call E v e I y n
Newport Belch 5200 REAL ESTATE FOR SALE BY OWNER Halbakken 6~5444 or
ty 3 Br. 2 ba. home on ap. $235 ma. l.se. 968-4541 aft. 6
prox. ~I >:er,. $48,,DDO $160. 2 BR, l~ii · ba.
Broktt townhouse. Redec:, F'le\V shag
ba, bltns dshwr. crp/drps. Newly dee &: crptd, also 2 * Swlin Pool, Put/a:rttn
fp. $300 836/5750 542-1215 BR split level crpta, drps, * F'rpl, Indh'/lndry f1c'ls
bltns. Cpls prefen-ed. 222 1145 Anaheim Av•.
, __ :.________ Gen•'r•I 4 units. 2 • 2 BR, l BA & Ms.-3165:_ ______
1 N E A R W E ST C L I FF $990 2-3BR. l "' BA. 54S--61M '3345 NEWPORT BJ:.VD. delighUul, lge. 2 Br. garden Rent1J1 Wanttd Officea 1Uita'b1e for eom-
675-6591 4!M-Il61 Res~ ,carpets. Child O.K. Bkr. Dupl•xn Unfurn. 3975 lrd st., HB. 536-6321 early ,.co,.ST!!!!!A'"M""'ESA""'"'"""'&t2"'"·282<,..
DUPLEX Un!m, 1vaU July 1.:•:;;m;;,·~~~~~--$ll0 Bachelor apt, close lo
apt. Couple pref.; MlrTy. no Business Proptrty 6050 merclal, Medical, Dental. pets, no children. Sl60 Mo. Mrs. Loretta T•rry
Hal "''--'"'n & A··--·-314 Sth St Air-cond .. crpta. elevator UNIQUB La.guna Hideilwa:j>, ~ -"-------~~ Terraced ptdens, M:rttned RANCH style, 3 BR, 2 BA. ]. 3 bdr 2 .. built-ins incl. * 1 BR at beach. Adults be h G W/W •vail ac . lll'8.g!', ,
• ""-"" ......... o•~" · · XLNT Business property tor 35c PER SQ .FT.
GOLD Medallion, 2 BR 2 be. Huntington Be1ch sale by owner In N.B. 1.oned Stl-5032 OR 67>2464
room, full~ crptd. Exquislle cpts, drps, frplc, bllins. fncd
canyon view. S 19, 8 0 0 . yd. Nr Har H.i $250. &46-1189 . .....,.,
dshwtihr. fireplace. 1 block only. Lease, riow. Bkr. ~
from beach. ~lla8 219 15th SI., HB 1165 2 BR stud· I . ;o, w w,
e<eN I AL~ NEW SllO up. l-i-3 Br, hid built-ins, child O.K .Bkr .
cpa, drp1. patio. $165 & $175 C-L 64&-5161 1 _ _.:=..:=...:::;_=='--·I
.232 Hiiaria W Ph. You are the winner of NEW deluxe oWce lpaces ~. BY 320 to m 1q rt at Sant. 713/981-7039. 2 tlck,ts to the Busln"' Renttl 6060 Ana F'Wl It Crown Ve.Uey
RENTALS
·HoUHI Furnished
$125. 3 BR older fixer upper.
Stove, ttfr\g. fenced yard.
Bkr. 534-6980
Aph. furnished &: sauna pool11, rec nn. Heil 534-6980
It Algoquln. Mgr 84~3137 DELUXE upper. 2 BR, new-FIREWORKS e PRIME Retail Location e turnoU. 831-1400, 499-4198.
G•n•r1I .non Jy dee, ftpl, bltns, yrly. SPECTACULAR I7X40, X1 nt toot&: auto traf-300 Sq. ft. Office
::.:::.:;.=.;. ____ JO.::=.; i.::G.::•:.:rd:;•:;;n;..G;::'c•:.:ve.=_ __ 44=10 ~Ciiosiit~·~-iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiii$iiliiOOiil -'67S-O'IS3:;;:;;=:':':642--0507:=:==:::o at the !~~-=r.1•871 Harbor, CM OOSTA MESA 646-2130 Rent1l1 to Sh•re 2005 Cost• Mell 3100 HOLIDAY Pl..AZA ._ O ANAHEIM V'K>"V<liO'I , · =-'------DELUXE. specious 1-Bdrm. SINGLE Young Adults Lux-Coron1 dal Mer 5'ZS STADIUM C I I 60t5
GAL, SO, lh8re 2 BR. 2 ba 3 Br, 2 Be. cpb:, drpz, bltM, Fum apt. $135. Plus Utll. ury a:arden apll with coun-HARBOR l~;i;;;iii;i;ii;i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil on July •th ~~ ~:i'c!E11~:~ S:X~: om!Mn: 1
apt with same. Prl pat, $260. Includes prdener . Heated pool. Ample parking try c;:lub atmosphere and -l7lh St CM. 645-2450, OFFICES~FOR RENT
pool. niceyl furn. H B 540--5844 No children-No pets complete privacy. SOUTH GREENS ~-.., Please call 642-:1678. ext. m,,,-======== ~fodem, spacklua, profetlklrr
96&--3l93 VERY nU:e 2 bed.room, fenc· 1!165 Pomona, C.M. BAY CLUB API'S. 13100 fl,. •rl• between 9 and J pm to claim 1· al on monthly hams. Aval!
HAVE !i BR 3 bath house, ed yard available June 25, $155. 2 BR,. l 'Ai ba studio. CHAPMAN Ave., Garden yoor tlcketJJ. (North County Office Rental 6070 8fV69. Contact Mr. Lapp, h8'n.. Want ttia'tul'e mi;n to l chlkl Ok. 548-ClOl . Elect kit, w/w, c 0 0 I. Grove rn.f) 636-lOJJ BACHELOR UNFURN. ON TEN .,......,.... t II f be I 540-1220)" '1 .............. s L L ·-· Ml>-llhare St~/ 1 1ud. til fro $110 ~~ 0 . ree num r .! LA0 GUNA BEAGH ....., .... J ,.. P10 ,!1C ~ • For Daily Pilot Want Ads Av a I I ab I e now. Bkr. DAll..Y PILOT WANT ADS m l It 2 BR. FW"l1 &: Untum RESJ>6NSIBLE young work· Air C di
1
..:. __ _. slon Viejo. 837-4911 54
9-2623
or 8*-l058 Diel 842-5671 for RESULTS 534-"980 Dial 542-M7B for RESULTS, AUD AVAJJ.ABLE Frplcs / prlv-patios/Pools. ing lady desires wtfumisbed on t -~m ln &partments; pooJ; l~~;;;:;;;;:;;,;;;.::;;;;:;..!,,;=;====::"':':""~===="'===;'r:=:: 1 • 2· &: 3 BDRM. Tennis. Contnt'I Bkfst. put-1 or 2 bedroom apt prefer-O?j.~ORES'/ A~ lndustrl1I Rent1I 6090
ltitchen privilege, 1 or lo Cost• Mel4 3100Colt1 MtN JIQO Cost• Miu 3100 Heated Pools, Olild Care Una: rrern. ably in N.B. to $100 mo. Delk tp9Cel available ~ 1 *Phone 548-8511 * ...._ ____ Center, Adj. to'Shopplfla:"-900 SPa Lane, CdM 644.26U 642-0022 aewett oWc:e bul\dlna •• 450 SQ. FT. BLDG.
2110
NEW 5 BR home, adjaourt to •
M!:aa \ferde Country Club.
Afa.il now wlltl lease to Sep1 ·
5.j 19&9. $500· mo. Call
&J.l..9393 ext 1A or Mends '*'....,,.,
N""port leach 2200
D<>iV"ER Shani bay Iron I
""""· • 1111., .......... paµo 70' prlval.t doc:k.. 1une •j .J~y. S25IXI mo. Bea:. :r:t., r Jae, $1000 mo. ~~u or 213 :
OCEANFRONT Older .f Br,
Li Yd. Y'r!y, l3llO mo.
I 673-.!0lll
,,...,,.T...,_ 2245
FORMAL EXFC1lTiVE f bdr'3 ~ overloo•ln1
P-Nn;>ort H.-.
&malen lv nn, din. rm.
v., Otht:r room1 around
pool.•E><qoll. furn, WOO I
·~·---,,.,--------..---.... -,....-· ".No pets lillo\ved ~chtacArthur nr-C.OUI UW)') D""IRE to l•ue •-N•bl~ or ~e_ loc!~ e .~~ E. lllh-St., Coata-Mca&-.-s.-@ 6t}}A /&"E,' tr. 270CfPetenon Wty;-attra:r.: ~ n.e,.~ ... ~ All Q.JINr Elee. -er. ' -s· Pacesetter Home In Eatan-., _ _. tJ •-·~•" ~-
I 1 "
bor It Adams, Colla Mesa HWY 3 BR. ....._.,, cattie -· ~"""' Ready for tenant . . ••• ·-o SO OF , <P"' da HI bow>dui" l,,_3 yrs. --•J -~-T w o ~· d mkt l '-h .,.. .... cu .,_.. $60 Month. 546-5040 S . I S 'I dW: dP '·f Ch k ' ' rps, gar, nr ""·O ·::R.:..:c~;;.::120~'-=~~=~~-1 ---· --..,. ml--'c:.:.=...;;,-'"----t ~oluto amp• erc1Tnv e or =~ oro ue le ·~ 1 Ad It t.. --··--•-FOR •· t •· tot
-iie. u 1' no pe ' e LANDLORDS e Fore1t AYe., ""1' .lead• to n.en or ....,ue;,
1~1 t~t '.1 I
II( A M-S,I l A dty dilld, upon IHing · I I I' r . his tlr•t rainbow·'" the coun-- _ . _ , uy, c1keCI, i<\Vhar a It suJ>
.---,,----. pcnad to -?" ...,_, [t A I. IN I zr .. 111 .... w. Jla ......
i"" ..,l"""'.:.,.t-r ..,1c-nrl""'i • f:1:::: :-... "'::::..-=' --, . . )oo-........... -.
.. Pll'!l .-DI' V lflt£1S
I I · I I I I I I I • •
CONSTRUCllOH
JUST COMPlfTING
675--0845 FREE RENTAL SERVICE M~ parldna Iota. $50 120Xl.f0, completely ~riced.
COZY 2 BR, ti·pl. Ground Broker 5.34-69112 per month tor spac.. Delk suit. f()I' storap, M-1 :zoo.
llor. Nr. 11hopping. Uni. $225. Md chairs a....O..blt for $5. tna. Sl50 Month. ~
Adults only, no pets. WANT: 3 Br home, 1~ Ba, BUllrialt houri anawerina lndU!t bid&: In M·l, CM
Hal Pinchln & Auoc 6T,,...392 prcfc'r Co!ita Me111.. WIU P8.Y attvice avallUlt tor flO. 17th St. 3500 IC(. ft.
Hirbor H•lghti four 2 BR. 2 BA, Swedish frplc. $185. Mo. 548-84'3 All utfUU. Pl.id except 645-1133 ~· 642-1479
Rental Mana.r'r -l ml'l'lac 6: cute. 2 yrs old. Rooms for Rent 5995 ·tel~Aii.Y Pll..01' NEW indu.atrial bldg, 2500 sq.
1'11"11. Oidstltnsen S22J mo. 675-5720 ft. 9c per ft. 1439 Monrov1a.
3117-A Clnr11mon Ave. HUGE Room w/kltchen 222~~ 8~ CM. 613-9017
Costa Mesi a.lboa 5300 . priv, patio, worMn o nl,y. ....
(1 block wat cl Harbor Blvd GRACIOUS adult 11 v I n a: • Ute of houae. M6-l131 l;;;iiii., ... iiiiiiiiiiii'""iio I! :L;°";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';1;00~1
2 blocks eouth of the Spac. 2 BR. 2 BA, walk-in ROOM NEAR OCC. priv, Prime LacetkMt I•
San Dt.ellJ rteeway) closets. Bay Ai: ocean vn, bath, eoUegc Pl or Lcrvtl,y aurroundlflia. Oalees
Phone 546-IOJ.4 pool &: boat Blips. 6T.h1003 empJO)'ed lad.Y. s.ts.-ml open on court yant. Air
__ ,... '~ --------1 a: 2 BDRM apts. $165 &: KITCHEN Prtvllegts -men cond •• p>d ll1hUng &: clean!
THE GABLES $200 yerly. Anita, Jones only. 803 Governor St., C.M. Perfect for Adv. AQ., Ins.,
Av8.llabJe JUl,y 3rd Realty 67J-8210 646-5289 or 893-6370 a>A etc. One 1ultf! is 460
Olx 2 BR with &t.rll&e $1-43. • PLEASANT room _ prlvatl 1q ft A: one ls 1050 tit rt.
AdQlb • cpta • drpe, -bltina -l1lbo1 Island 5355 entrance for worldnc man. Both only S2c • llf ft. Mesa fenced yard. Water paid. 646.!689 Verde Profes. BJdJ'.. Jim
2439 Onnp Ave. NEW 2 BR •Pt. Elet tell Wood M&-S99Q * 638-'12> * cltan'r oven. d 1 b w hr, FV1lN 1 bedroom, duplex. l~~~!!!!J!~~,..~~ SHARP latte 2 BR apt. wuher/drytr, trplc, crpta, S97.50 mo, uU1 DCl. l earaar. SMALL omCE Pac::llic
dfltS I cptt, bit • lnl. Quiet d?pt. On Gn.nd Canal, lJt-220 Slerb SI. '4U34l Coast Hlah\\"a)',' NewpOtt
bldJ. Adults on\y. St~/mo. tie Bal. Isl. Boat docklna DIAL dlr'Kt f0.5611. Qiarse Bfach, 139 month. MG-9881
546-U914 aflcr 6::.:1 or prtvll. No ~II. no children. your ad, then 1lt back •nd RENT ore.. ample prka:,
·M-:1
2.38 ACRES
Pr1n1e a.ta Mesa Location
Lona term around Ieue
• P!:r Month Ca1J Jim ())bb
m;1 1 Au&· ~ )'early. t.:...=.sc=.RA=:M~·-=LETS=.:...:.~A_N_s_wo __ 1N_c_LA __ sS1_F1_c_A_n_o_N_1_s_o_o_ _,. .
wknds. Rer. req. S1W mo. 613-3328 U1ten to U'lt Phol1e ~I busy Joe. 2340 Nwpt Blvd,
While t»e('hanb? DAILY PllDT WANT ADSf White ekphantal bim9+line CM $73. 6*-2544, 543-8333 ! 9 .,_ ______ _
j .
. ,
' •
' .
T-, ....._24, lM m:'iJ~f,---j1tlllnilft:Tl"---l'JilDIOIJl~~INTS SlaYICI DIRICTORY, lllMCI DIUCTOR't .IOIS a IMl'l.OYMINT .IOIU a IMl'lOYMENT JOIS ~PLOYMENT JOSS a ~PLOYMINl
i.....:°"::::-:::.:•:..' -----°"';:.:c."~r:.;;ol;..._ __ ...,..._ 1 ·-ond--NO-T_l_C_f:s_-:::::: I c..i-i-t'! -TILi, c.-"741 ·""'=~;-w:· -:::~;;";:; ... ;· ;"'"';•;;n.;o-;D =Ho~lp=W=•:;ntoc1;;;·~M~·:;n~n~oo~.;1:H~·='n;;;;"'~'..li.t~;· =w=-~~72~00=Ho;;;1tt;;W;;;; .. :; ..... ;;;N;:;-:;;;;;;;1 a. E. W1nhd 62401. L W-6240 Loot 6401 QUAU'l'Y ~. -• v...., Tiie Tiie 11u • I• , l~~~-~~iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii lmMESE o... point !•male t1m1a -New ......_ b7 Clllt. ~ llll1oll • -ENGINEERING MAC· HINI STS tll Jli yn ol!I. DiA'weum at Contnct. ...,.a ' No Job loo cnaU. PJut.r , ,.
$$ MOR~ CASH SS .. .., Sun, June 22. W•arirc ...... laldar • ho"" PROJECT DESIGN ENGINEERING dff.r flea eollar. Reward. Cemtftt, Concrete .'600 nJU'. ln...J.957,...._
· ~~ Tur, CdM, • CONCRETE' fin. .. u.. TrM Somce 6910 ~ulres experience Ill design of bydraullc
For Your Hom• Equity -~~-~_,..--,--:::,-I etc. COncrete "bl.k top saw-servo 1y1tema and components, aucb as &c•
Absolutely no cott • • • •• LOST -Vic Avocado. CM. lne:· Heu. Dela, 6G-8Slf 'l'RE&$ Jll'W)ld. q.ped A tuaton, MrVO valves or solenoid valvu.
to you tM SELLERI prqnant cat. black IUr, e CONCRETE wortt aJI nmovtd. • >'n •ap . white roob:, yellow ~ t,ypea. Pool dedrs & cwtom. Paul!'0'1 Tree Se r v I c e n years of paying MORE CASH for Orange Chlldttn'• pot. R •ward. Catt ,.._1324 =633-=1234======
Ci' unty Property. 646-3496 or...._ •CUSTOM PATI~. . ~
Desires strong capability In servo system
dynamic analysis and/or Ould system stress
analyals. Rr.rlDISH-Brown m a I • , ......, Upholstery ,.7_.
C.11 th• Rest .•• Then c•ll tM BEST "Il:ed b d ........ 11 concrete sawt.nr &: removal 1-''--"--'-----·-r rec """"' smn ' State Uc. *8''-1010 c:zncoSIO'S CUit. 1Jbol.
\ BMRLY JACKSON REALTY ~ ....... :::~:::"~: * CONCREl'E Worl< bond· E ..... 111 Chum&nahlg CADILLAC CONTROLS ..,"'°" 545-1245 64&-0305 or &ls-=2 ed & lie. Concrete ~wiflc. JOO% lln! M2-10t Dlvl1lon of Ex-Cello Corp. _, Phillips Cement. 548..QflO l8Sl 5'Jewporl Bl., C.M.
JOIS a f:MPLOYMENT , ... WH1n111 AVI •• COSTA MllA ------
L... 6IOO BUSINESS ond
1:::::.:...------FINANCIAL
M"" Vordc Ta!N.., a-. Opportvnltfet 6300
lot. Ckat.
SUBLET <W" Wre jtwetry
51Cft, 8&L lsl. Suitable..
R1nches 6150 rdb. rrpain. etc.. S46-72ll 1=~=~-THOROBRED
HORSE RANCH
======
6320
J.st il 2Dd loam for quick
cub. Bcrrow en your pl'!>
perCY eq •ithou.t disturbio&
)'OW' low Interest ls: 'J'I)g,
Also bu)"ttS for 2nd TDs.
Sattler J.iortgitge Co. Inc.
6405
e COUPLES e e SINGLES e
Tired ol B&n, Mall t Hi Cost
computer clubl: JOIN THE
FUN! TH'E IN CROWD -
DIV, OF J.M.P. Meet ot!M!ni
with YOUR lntettsUI at our
weekly partiea or select
them individually j: CGALS
join FR.EEi Call Leah 1·9
p.m. ~9.120.
LICENSED
Spiritual Readina1. advice
on all matten, 312 N.
Carpel Laying & Jell W hd -71IOO -2491
Repair 662' '" • An equal opportunity employtt
CARPET -VINYL • Tll.E PHYSICS, microclrcult., thin ~!!!!!!~~~~~~"!!~!'J!i!!i!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!I
Lie contr. Ftte estimates 1ilml. optics. ftPCl'tl, math. Hel1t Wanted, Men 7200 Help Wtnted, Men 7200 642-1403 $1()..7162 lab belper, etc. &munll'
=======""I Job. Rocent D.S. In -
Gardonint 6680 Aae 21 -!ill, 1-*
-------Beadl. -ANJH(lff'S
646-1948
The Bnt. eosb no more!
Experienced Maintenance
Budget Landscaping
,..Gradl.l8te Horticulturist
Job Want..i, Llldy 7020
EXPERIENCED ~
panJon. Cook diets. Excel.
Jent rett. Ext 105, 4M-85C1
EXP. Typlot (10 wpm) tun
time, awnmer, Univenlt;y ---
J. c . Penney c.o.
l'uhion Island
:Newport Beach
We Have
An Ojlonlftl For A
*COOK*
* ENGINHRS
Senior Electronic
Engineers
4-S yeara: electric design ex·
perlence requittd, Graduate
electronic enginett desired.
Senior Logic
Operator Senior
MUJt be exper~ced on turret lathe, have l
own tooll and dO own setups.
Drill Press Opercitors
j
I I
Musi be expetlenced on all _types of drill•,
have own t001s and do setups. Minimum •
three yrs. experience .
Tool 'Grinder
Minlmum five yrs. in close tolerance grind·
Ing of high-speed and carbide tools.
Hone Operator
Must have minimum of two yrs. experience
on Sunnen Hone.
CADILLAC CONTROLS
Division of Ex-Cello Corp.
1 IU Wllhtier A .... C•ts M ....
-2491
160 llcreti of beautiful South-
ern Calif. land v.'ith complete
training, bollrdlnr, ~
& Layup faciliti6. This is •
\vorking horse ranch with an
estimated replacement coe:t
oI exUting lacilltit>S ol "IP'
pronmately Sl,250,CQI. Full
price withoUt live stock
SJ,000,IXK>. Ir. easy tcrtnJ.
Far more tnfonnation call
Glenn Thotnp90n.
~ Harbor Area 20 yn.
336 E. l lU. St
~nn ~
ANNOUNCEMENTS
and NOTICES
Camino Real, San O~nte
492-9136. or 496-9507
JOAM-lOPM
SPECIAL $2 READING AlLEN BROS.
GARDENERS STUDENTS 0-tlc Holp 7035 * DESPERATE lS year working. way lhru college. Gtorae Allen Byland AaellC7
Recent. aucceasful experience
ln all phaae1 of the food in-
dustcy ii required. C.Ompeta.
live wq:e1 and outstanding
benefit. including profit
Design EnglnMrs
4.S years dli:lta.J. las:lc designl'!!~~~~·!!·~··~'!!'!!' !!''!'!'~"-:":::"~v•!•~PI:::'~":::'!!!!!~~~!: aperie~ required, Gradu-i ·
ate physical science or Math Help Wanted, Men 7200 Help W1nt9d. Men noo
Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc.
1818 W, Qlapman Ave.
Ora~. Callf.
SU-2621 Eves-wknds S4U727
AcrMge 6200
Lqune Beiech
7 ACRES W/PERMIT
TO KEEP HORSES
postal employee n e e d 1 Exp. Lie. Reas. 64MZ}3 Employer ~ Fee
financial aa111iatanee. At any JAPANESE Gardenlnel.OC-B E.1Sth. SA 5f7-m95
Found (Fr" Ads) 6400 cosl John hving, P.O. ~ service and maintenance. Ollneae Uve-tns. Oleerful 23!3, N.B. 92660 Al cl so ean up. Permanent Expentnced
APRICOT poodl~ pup, oo Attrac:tlve Expert e 548-2572 e Far Eut Aaeney 6C.r703
tap. Vie TeWlnkle ParV, YOUNG WOMAN e MOW • EDGE * WEED.
Ot. Call to identity. dancer will teach )'OU all Prot lawn ma.int by capable Help W•nhd, M-n 7200
LI 8-«i70 ' latest ttePt. Call Ardell College studenll. Reas!
YOUNG male pUppy, put 2ll: '91-fSJB l -lO PM Kalina Brothen M6-123f,
German Shepherd. we 11 REDUCE aafe I: fast with Reliable lawn eervioe.
trained, houaebrtm Brown I: GoBest tablet. Ir: E-Vap mow, edge, trim.
white. Vic Newport lsland. "wattt pW!i." West c 11 r f * s.n.1404 *
m-345.5 Pharmacy, 2043 Westclill I ----:.,...=766=---
6/3/69 .Y"I· pup ?Md. sz. ,,,°'=·==-.,--~-,-1 Reliable Lawn Maintenance
near n Camino Ii Bulhard WIDOWER de1perate for Gardening and Clean-up
ITT JABSCO
TOOL & DIE
MAKER
-· major desired. ~ 1.;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I
MOTOR HOME
e BUllDERS
e ASSEMBLERS
APPLY IN PERSON
10AMto 9PM
Monday thru Friday
PENNEY'S
FASHION ISLAND
Project Engineer
4-5 years digital l<>1lc and
electronic project experience
desired, Graduate e~
de~.
VANGUARD
DATA SYSTEMS
la a srowth • oriented, pe~
ipheral eqUipment manufact-* urer looa.led near Orana;e
""""'""''""""'""'""'""'~I County Airport. Pleaae re-lpoad wtth tt1ume to:
Equal opportunity employer
*
ITI JABSCO
MIU & DRILL
OPERATOR
Good benefim and
working conditions
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
Adjacent subdlvWon o n e
mile E. of hwy, Util 1vall.
$42,1'.m. % Cub. bal lit trust
deed. Write or contact:
Georre R. Kress, Box 914,
Lquna Be1ch or phone
...... 725.
FV, black wfwhite mark· cook-hskpr. Jdeal lit. for AL'S Gardening Se rv ice. mp on chest, 962-3248 woman w/chlld who fw.ds ~'=~-"'="~-,..,,.,,-1 .. 1.ee to Iv. Lois of indep. Lawn maintenance, ~
F o u ND: Poodle-vicinity time . .t9.1-4677 all 6 l-'"'-=-&:;,:cl.,:•::;an";;'ui':p.'--:C:,.:::=--I Bushard Ir: Hazard.
Requires only commerci-
al tool bulldlns fot small
pwnp manufacturer. Age
no barrier, Good benefitl:
and workin& concll!Jons.
Apply to penonne1 dept.
WANTED part • time
aalesman lo sell product!
never before oUered to the
public. Unlimited op.
portuntty !or advancement
Truly a chance to get in on
the ground floor. Excellent
aalary & commiuion ar-
ranaement. FOi' further in·
fo. call betwee.n 9:30 & 12. 642-<861
P .O. Box 1820, Irvine, Cal.
attn.
Engineering Department
1485 DALE \VAY ~'!!!!'!!!!~~'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•JCOsrA Jl.1ESA, CALIF. 9'l62fi P.fana.l(emen t Trainee cn4) 545-8251
Immediate openings !or men
with experience In plumb-
ing, electrical, \vall!, cabin-
ets and finish. • or we will
train you. Must have wme
hand tools. See: Rick, 213.5 ~n Drive, Cosb\ Mesa
642-"'8
Take over pymnts. 10 Acru
no down. S29 mo. Near
Lake A: City. 894-4743
R. E. Wontod'-___ 6_2_40
CASH QUICX-need 3 or 4
Br, G.l. or FHA house near
here. 4!8-1948
BUSINESS ona
FINANCIAL
\\'estminster I den l l I y. MARRIAGE A FAM IL y CUt & Edie Lawn
839-2631 PROBLEMS can be mlwd. l\.laintena~. Licensed
Call Divenllied Counselors ,-.,.,;,.-;.;;',;.64-i0.:'23lc=.=O:tt"olt0:-:~'~I BOSTON bull mi'<ed. female, ,. approx. l';t yrs. vi c . 67>2300 hrs. 11).5. CLEAN-UP Speclallsl! Mov-
Fairview Rd. It WilllOll. RIDE Wan~ 0CC to Corona Ing, -edging, odd j 0 b • ·
May 30. 548-fi059 eves only del Mar, eves. Will ~. ,-;:;<'7;:;;;:o;bl;-'-:· 5'8.Ql55:::::~;:,,;;o:::: EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER PEKINGNESE -imall black Call 615-4%15 alt 1 pm. JAPANESE p.rdener Comp!
& white, female, vie. Vic-WOMAN writing , In 1 Ie 1 serv. Exper, dependahL!, tree est. 642-4389 1485 DALE WAY tori.a & Pacific, C.1.1. Call to book, needs male &OClal -...,-,--,~,c_,-,--I COSI'A MESA, CALIF. 92828
Identify &12-4360 viewpoint. 6-8. 640-6616 Johnson'• Garden.Ina cn4) se.82:il
RED Male Dachshund ! Finest equJp., expert c:&re.
1-iesa Verde -Adams area. Announcements 6410 Planting, clean-ups. 962-ms
BOYS 10 °14
Carrier Route1 Optn
'°' Lquno Bead>, So. Lquno
DAD..Y PllDT
64Ul21
Bus. Opportunities 6300 545-6536 LEARN TO SWIM IN YOUR Yamauchi Garden Se:rvice 'c'""u-17tocl--,,lo-n-G.....,~r-ou-nd~1m_•_n EXP pastry cook &
\VHITE Kitten-vie. 17th & OWN POOL! REAS ., RED Frff~~~C:-wtina Pe r form CUstodlal and Expfrycook,part
HELP!! Orange 64&-2515 CROSS CERT. MRS. BEE rround• maintenance duties. time. 494-4898
National Co. needs 11 54.;-1498 EXPERT Japaneee ~ Knowledp of method• and Be:nton'1 Coffee Shop
distributor for candy and Lost 6401 LEARN TO PLAY THE tenance H.B .. F.V. mu. materials requittd. Salary __ 133cc..cS·c..°""=.c''-H'-wy-'-''-LB __
snacks in Cost.a MeSll Of' PIANO with legms from a can Mack, BG-8442 re.nre $496 -$616, Contact A COMBINATION
ne"-. aeru. pe r s'o n KIDS lolt their pet-A med· UC t M . •t . can Jo~nffa Gardner Penonnel oftlce, Hanttna· n-•-t h I ~ ...... ~ ium &!.zed black do&: CL.a.bra-. . . us1c "aJOf', r--••Rn.-.... Unlo H" h •-hool ...,s .... uran e pet selected must be able to Bruce _ 546-4478. Expf:r, compl yard serviee! ""' """"'";u n II 03<; dJlhwuher. Day abifL Top devote 2 to 10 houn per dor-Cocker), male, with cur-"'--t .. ~. """o ............ , Dlttrict bd:ore noon, June .. _ __._ San J quln 1Y·halred ea.n, answers to G .i H OFFSET Printing -·-::,;;·~:'Eu:;;;. ;-;.t·~T..~~;;;;:;;;;";--1.!!'"!:.·~T~d~··!"-~~m~·~)"536-~!:9'~3L WIPI-n&i,.;llU oa •-eek (days or ews) to name Deacon. Lost in Costa (discount on order 200 & over) * Expert J•INMM Golf Course. 18021 Culver
make very hi.ah earnings. lofe111 IJ't'a. C.all 548-M49. 177 H Riverside, NB &U-0920 =;Fl;;;N;EST;:=W=O=RK==64&-0384===-~Af~ Rd. nr UCI. Irvine. See You ~ keep your rpesent ~ZVUl"~ Wayne, 133-()112
position. No selling. $1~ TWO mack Male Labrador Yoww mature male t....J..IR-
caah required (9e'CUI't'd}. Relrievers one 15 mo old, Tr1v1_1 _____ 64_3_5 H1ullng 4730 for ~ future, M;t'i: Wcel'JRd Real Estate Sales.
For immediate Interview In son 2 mo. Reward. CDM able to I and deal with man needed for immediate 673-5450 SUP.fMER School In Europe GENERAL HAUl,ING mee employment. New unit now
your area send name, lld· have to sell June 28 trip 6 & CLEANUP people. No exp. nee. we lllnc Wil train
dress and phone number to: SP.iALL, Black, flulty kitten, "'eeks. Call 546-34~ $12 per load. 962-6846 Mll'aalnln. 8">1.,P(lyS potnlnpetorooSbon p~ 'Four' s..!sons ·Homes ROtrfE DEPARTl\1ENT Sal. vie Newport & SL ...,16 PO Box 58 Isabel, CM ReWard. Karen, SERVICE DIRECTORY HAULING, clean-ups, lotl, Center), H.B. Huntington Be•ch
l;-~~~Cat~lfornlo~~~fil~'lf;~9 ~494-::.c,,""'7:,,;;.;..:"'.:...:,.,._..:...:,933=~= B1by1lttlng 6SSO garages, etc. Lr& truck, . .._ 961-4500
GREY &: while female CAT, Mndyman, an,yti.me, Call • FIBErc.GlAS • ARCHITECT desicner I
N 3 SISTER sitter service ••• BOB 645-2256 e REPAIRu.au e
ACTIVE PARTNER F'riday vie Ruby a: o. ~ dratmman eXperlenced In
88.yfront. Bal Ille. 673-8687 never worry about a YARD/pr. clnup. Remove Experienced, mature, type v construction. Small
For wholesale proce.5sing & REWARD babysitter aga~l call to tree:s. ivy, dirt, tractor back permanent, eood pay, office in Corona del r.1ar,
dist. planL Est. 12 Yrl in =~~~~~,_.,........., 494-5376 does the job. Ages hoe, grading. 96)..8745 beneftb:. SCHOCK BOATS Kermit DonlJ ·a: Associates, •--'--im. Growth $95,000 J•V Small dog; blond and 17 15 11 ~ ~-~ hi _ .. L·--· • • · B & G Houl'-r __ .,1__ •u.;>-2Ui0 * Newport AlA 675-ll64 plus. p I an n e d expansion w le, n:u , ..... ,~. name "'• _,-,,..,..
could almost double $27.500 Herman : REWARD BABYSITTING, My home. Reuonable. 00-1403 p R /$a.. e:.cso SERV. STA. A'ITNDNT:
present profit, Need hard· Ml-72)8 Nice play room & fenced In XJ •t • "' ~, !!,~':!;'o C Full ttme, Airport Texaco.
working partner w/ $35.000 PLEASE Rein. a Pr i c 0 t yard. Only lunch furnLWd. Hou~clunlnt 6735 r1nn." 'PPCarv ""-"~:.::: ,..,: • .; See Mike, 4678 campus Dr/
( Near \Veslcl\f( stnppfrw -auuw......... ..__. N B cash; buys i.i interest secur-poodle. dog is ill. vie .. 13th Call MAINTENANCE • residen-Kay, 546-5410 ' · ·
ed. no debts), v.·ho can help H.B. Rev.·ard. Lonely Wldow area. 548-U38 t!al 1r; commen:lal, windows JASON BEST 2 FUI.L time exp'd service
COOK
Daya & Nights
APPLY IN PERSON
MON '11-IRU THURS
BE'IWEEN 3-5 P.M.
SHACK SHOP
3444 E . Co•st H ighw•y
Corona del Mer
JANITOR
Must be able to work third
shill, 10:30 PM to 7 AM.
Musi be able to do renera.I
plant and oUice cleanln&'.
C•dlll•c Controls
Division or Ex-Cello Corp.
1866 Whittler Ave.
Costa Mes•
-2491
An equal opportwlify
employer
Production Control
EXPEDITOR
PART TIME EVES •
$3.50 per hr.
Call 541-7782 r.tr. Bond
e FRY COOK e
Graveyard shift. 2 yrs exp.
Heavy break!a.rit. Good sal·
ary for good emplyees. 18
or over. Please apply in
"'"""· COTTAGE COFFEE SHOP
56:1 \V, 19th St., CM
INSTRUCTOR
young, mature male, neat
appearance. MU!t be able to
meet lltld deal with people.
{Part time available} apply
in person; 18.585 Main St. (5
Points Shopping Center),
H.B.
Store Mgr. TralnH
$500.
Excellent future for riabt.
man, call Loraine, .r.ter-
chants Personnel Agency,
2M3 Westclifl Dr .. · N.B. Ms.mo
Billing Clerk $541
Some accounUng exp. 2 yrs.
college. Excellent benefits.
Call Dan, Merchants Person-
nel Agency, 2l}:.13 Westcliff
Mll!lt have over lhr"'l'e
recent experience in
chine s~p expediting.
Cadlll•c Controls
""· I .-;D.,;' ·,..· "N'-B>. -:645-0:·::;277:-;;:Qc:c--=:,,.-; ma· JANITOR, part lin1e, eves &
Sat In Huntington Beach.
Janitor Service. J644 Bevl"r-
ly Bldv., L. A. 9C004 213:
Division l)f Ex-Cello Corp.
1166 Wf>lttlar Av1.
Cost• Mese
-2491
387-7317
THE QUICKER YOU CALL,
THE QUICKER YOU SEU.
* DRIVERS*
No Experience
Necessary!
Murt have clean C.aillomla
driving record. Apply
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th St.
Co!lta Mesa
FULL l i n1 e Delicate11en
man. See Terry 495 E. lTth
St., C.M. LI S-9314
Help W•nted
Women
Sharp Gals
* M•tur•
18 to 40
7400
Car Wash Cashiers
Car Wash Hostess~
I T!ut~~~.~~:~!e~.
pany, mulU locations. j
Metro· California
Business Enterpris11
I 2950 H•rbor Blvd. 1 Costa Me11 .546-81"
Dental Recept. A Bkkpr
Exp. or college, 25-45.
54&..1000
admln. &:. 11ervlce rood ac· 1 _._6'_2-8085_______ RELIABLE, exp'd teenager our specialty, X!nt work, Employment A;ency station help. No piK>ne calls. An equal opportunity
cnts. Books open. Phone aft LOSf: \\'eimaraner, male; seoeks full time summer reu! Refs. 642-9«6 ~ So. Main. Santa Ana RICHFIELD al 19th & emplcyer Help Wonted, Men 7200Help W•nlod, Mon 7200
6 pm only. <213} 592-1500. babysitting. 1.1esa Vt>rde v1c. N wport Blvd CV.
vie. Balboa Bay auh. lO pref. Xlnt reb, reu rates. CARPETS, \Vlndows, firs, BOAT ASS!MBLER e ' • MATURE • SERVICE COM· l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I Mos. old. Reward. &42-6762 Call P.1ary MS-4347 etc. Rea or Come'!. Xlnl Flberxtu, bondlna: &: 11.nal So8E'"·~~ PLETED; Exp'd in ll.S.
\VANTED: off-sale liquor ADULT Altered ma I e , L C work Reul Reta. 5484lll hardwi,... Ex~o---' 0-1.. ucr • ncspons e ··--'•hp •nd l•"to-pro. I ENS ED care, I child 2 ~' '"'~ M4J SIGN PAINTER ~ ' '' liceflS(', Orange County. sh/hrd liOUd blue cal need apply. duction. We will train ror YOUTH WANTS JOBS
ti .., 0139 CM n-·· "'•" "~°" yrs. or over, my home, J I I I 6790 4~ San Clemente Ci. ; .,.,....., W-side, · ..,,,. .. ? ~· t.fidway City. S1S \V k. •n tor• NEWPORT BOATS production of small wood If v~u'r1 I young ponon willi n9 to work or 111 odvlt '
loo kin\1 for I willi ng worker, th111• ,;,. Or1n\1 0 Co••I \
•r•• non·p rofil youth employm1nl conl•ri ''" htlp ~ow. •
DlAL direct 642·5678, Oiara:e OLIVE Green Ladies Wallet 892-7818 WAU.S. Windows, floon, 1919 Placentia Ave. CABINET MAKER & parts and general v.·ood work.
your ad, then ait b8ck and Vic Bristol & Paulartno ,..-ts. Commerclal & Costa Mesa. 642-!53n MOLDER. Boat Mfg, Plant. KINGSLEY MFG. CO.
listen to the phone rinr! Church. Reward. 613-7356 \VbEbEKLY Babysitting, rrcl. ...,-,1~d•nUal. Dally, -kly DRIU. PRESS OPERATOR 8601 Edison, Hunt. Bch. (PhOJle for appointment) a y or up to Syn, H.a . 1n 536-9563 day or night.
NO matter whet It I!, you SMALL blk/wb fem cat, 4 niy home. 892-6302 i.::""":='i"':=lll:=•o;·,;"';-7350;;==! set up and operate 1mall 1 ~N~E=E°'o=E=o~,-'-=en.-.;M"°.,.,-ha-n"'°le-. rl48-6116 HUNTINGTON
BEACH YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
I
I
ean sell It with a DAILY wh pa .... ·s, ycllo""' collar, "ivt"U.'7"""•°"·b~~----Bu:raMasten and Delta. Escrow Mn r $12,000 Pll.DT WANT' AD!! 642-5678 &!boa Id, Jun 6. 494-831';' .,. Y5lt your home by p h I Small c-.toler&nce m. Sa1ary & comm. Exp'd, • the week, you f u r n I s h •ptr •ng ng t 1 p.rtl DISC IN 0 tools UIOO N wport Ftt paid. Xlnt oppty to join
YOUNG PEOPLE;
llf~ UP wHll 1'111 Ctflltt 111 .,.ur , .. , new • • ,
fir t•i. OH11rtv11111-..
O!ARGE your want ad now. For Oa0Ur._1Pt~t~anl Adi transportation. 642-1407 P•fntlng 6l$O k~~~NTS i?ol S. HoU: ~Yd., Costa M:sa. big dynamic N.B. CG. 5 yrs ADULTS 1 •1 Find ii with • want adl ..... ....-......•o exp. Also Jee jobs. C.a.11 Key, CllKll wnll "'"' c1111ten
BUSINESS .nd BUSINESS and WhoAmNT0ED1•1 kbab1Y•1itti1'nr; mty NEAT, Exp. Painter, no day, Santa Ana. 549--0345 TRAINEE manager • A~Q.> 546-5410. :.n~ 11M,Y111t. 19 "':,, ~ ,',',•0
9','0,'1',.,', c''.,',,".'•.IAOf·~. 11
SERVICE
• w a e nan up o drlnkin1. Collep student. SERVICE STATION Royal English Fish & Oiips, JASON REST ,..r e111111,., , •• "'
F:..:.;INc:AN:..:.;:..:C:.:l:.:A::L:_ __ _,_F:..:.;INC:A:..:NCIAL 2 yean. 1S8 Ma&n0lla, C.M. Low prices! Stew 543-4549 empl-with 0..,.,.rience, 4811 E. l7th St, CM. Employment A"ency t•r .,.._. -•IHll w.M-fic11 •• •111 Elli1 Av1 .• I
·-v1~~ ~.-... ... ltllcl11t i.r '"' , • ._. H . I II \ Bus. Opportunities 6300 Bus. Opporhlftltles 6300 orn.n care 5 di.Yi \I/eek, my PAINTING Int 4 Ext Lowest wan!ed for full Ume day BUS Boy and Kit. Helpe1 2120 So. Main, Santa Ana 1"""9flity ,.. ''" ..,.__ •11111191011 0•t · Op111
NUTS
•, OVER 300% MARK UP
Reliable people now being selected in
this area to service routes of new coin
operated HOT NUT dispenser s in local
bars, bowling alleys etc. You can get in
on the grotind floor in this high pro!it
business either spare time or fuU time.
No selling involved as all accounts are
established by company experts. This
is not a "gel rich quick" scheme but an
opportunity to become established with
1n eight year old company that sets you
~f.~ business under a bona fide repu~
e agreement. This business re-
quires a minimum cash investment o!
$1095 for stock & supplies.
YOU CAN MAKE UP TO
$2511 MONllfL Y SPARE TIME L
OVERS-MOHTHLY FULL TIME
Our "" .... bonua pl•n en•bles you to
trlplo your ln"l•I ,...,.. without f\lrthor
irrYw:h I '8ftt •
For Interview wtlle lo Products Distri·
buUne Co., PO Box 1979, Costa · Mesa,
(Include pbone num~r). _
,.
home. Mature ._1oman. contracted prices. F'lllJ.y ins. shift. Apply: 604 S. Coul The mue Beet t 1.m.-5 p.m. Mo111l1y1 I
646-1932 Saliafaction guar. Free est. Hwy., l...q'. Bch. Chevron ___ _,S13-8904::..:=-=~ ~~E onl~~ER;tro~ ~: HARBOR AREA thro119h Frid1y. l'ho11e :
Brick, Masonry, etc.
6560
lim Weeka 6'13-ll66 _Sta_.________ SECURITY GUARDS operate Chucket or Seeond YOUTH EMPLOY· '41·6067· · 1
EXT/Int pntg. Aver rm. $20 SERV. SI'A. SALESMAN. Newport area. Call between operation lathe. Small c~ MENT SERVICE 1 + lood pa.Int, neat work. Full time, awtna: shift Mu1t 9 am -2 pm 637-3010 tolerance instrument parll. (Spo1"11or1d bv Junior FOUNTAIN '
BUII..O, Remodel, Repair loc refl. Roy, 847-l358 be neat In appeUUCe and _N:.E=ED:::...d::.n.::·v",'-,::w;,.;lh=cl'-,-•• -.... -DISC JNSTRUP.1ENTS 2701 Ehell Club ond A11i1· VALLEY YOUTH I
Brlck, block, co ncrete , PAINTING. Papering JS yn h1ndwrlt1 nc. Apply 2590 Part time delivtty. 646-8266 S. Holiday, Santa Ana. t111c• Lt•9u1 of N,w. EMPLOYMENT I .~ LI bond Ne..,.,...rt Blvd CM "-'" "1•= port Bt1eh.I Oflic"'' !11 I crpntry, no job too 1mall. In HILflJUI-area. C & • -,....-., • · \VOOD Pattern Maker expcr., _~-~--------Centr1I l r1nch, l ov1'
Lie Conlr. 962.Q'MS l=ed=. =""'==='"'="=·="=""=2356==== PRODUCTION detl&n Located near 605 lrwy &: W•rehousemen $365 Clu b el the H••bor Are• SERVICE • i
880 $~~~ a.>ld~~ ;!"· Alondra. 861)..240~ Mature, sc'rvlce · comp.let~. 594 Cent1r Str1et--Co1· ISpo111orocl bv St11I' j
Business Serv.lce 6562 ,P.:;l•:::•;.:l;;;•r::l;.:n::g•o..:;R;;;a.::pa;;.1;.:r_6=:: · to 1 n-""""'"""=~~.,.--= Call Dan, MerchantJ Person-le Mt••· Op•n 9 o.m. to I Co11t Ju11ior Womo11'1 -, ,,:®::.l.::Ph::_::S;:.t.,,:C::;.M::::.. ----BREAKFAST Cook • exp. clllf p.tn. Mo11d1y th1ouqh Fri· Cl ' I Off· I N · e PATCH PLASTERING." Apply Flying Butler. Z1m· ncl. Aa;eney, 2403 West uo. 1co 11 unt t f . C. Bookkeeping Scrv. All •-~-"--to PLVMffiNG ware: ho u 1 c rn"",..,.., ......., Drive, NB. 645-2Tro Jev, Ju110 16 thro119h Offi<t. Fo.,ntihi Villey.. 11 , •Jt""s. r1""" esu11.,. · wholetale co. ~ 1\111 1 ~:;:·:;·~o~·~~"= '====~=========If A119. II , Tetephon•: 642· >Tt-e pickup & dcltvl".ry. Cail~ I· 0414. Hl9h Sthool, 1111 6 It· I Rt:f~. ~as. 847-8202 timl' llXp'd watthouse man. 200 W _ _. ••-7 .. 00
6890
546-TIOO Help W•nted, Men 7 "telo t ntwu, mwn ., SOUTH COAST 1h1rd St. • Feul'lteln Vol· 1
C•rpentering • • • • ••••••• 'f ltv. Open 10 1.m.·l ,.-... t PL~!1~~ :~ =ri: ::," 11-:;;.~,~PM·R·::u1Nc1E1~E:S ·1 ·~!~!.~~~~~fo~,. ~::~·~.:';:~~~ ,,;,., ... ! 6590 Plumbing
CARPENTRY
1.ttNOJt REPAIRS. No Job
TOl:I Sm&ll. Cabinilt 1n pr-
q:es ii: o t b e r eablnelL
se.8175, It no lllllW't'r leave
mq al 6'16-23'72. IL O. . ........
e 642-3121 e 2114 W. Oceanfront, N.8 . Or11190 Countv YMCA.1 I -==========='IYARD aaleaman, owr 21. s Office• ot 491 For•1t HUNTINGTON , ' 1 Poof S.rvlce 6910 day week, aome mechanical A•e .• 1.1911111 Btoch. BEACH UNION I
e lst Mo. F'r'et! Ex-per, lie. 2'1'67porH. -RED-Bt".:,RENTC.M t 1:00 .· ' P·"'· Mo11d•v•. HIGH SCHOOL "I ...ltobl•I Tony """··lot Pool a ""·· · t T11otd1.,., Thurtdov• ond DISTRICT ·I
ALS. i Opo11 ' '·""··110011 •nd
• .., NO EXPERIENCE NECESSAll:Y. 21 l'O lS YEARS. JOB I Servtce. 968-4818 MFX:HANIC Wanted. Clue: A Hl&H SCHOOL GRADUATE, tf YOU MAYE THE ~I'· • ,ricloy1. Pho111 '14-JJJJ, R
MASTER carpenter, $4 per lJcenaed inf. Apply In i TITUDE, WE WILL lltAIN YOU. l'l!ltMANENT EM· • M'ISSION EFERRAL I
hour. R.emodellna:-Rl:pe..ln. Remodel, Repielr, 6940 peMIOn Mesa Tow Setvb il l'LO'l'MENT, lXCELUNT OPl'OltTUNITY FOlt AD· t SERVICE t·I
.,...... 0< 531>-liOO .. ~. 6411 au.., CN VANCEMENT. t VIEJO YOUTH I EMPLOYMENT IS11peNi1ed by Robert ~~"ae~,~1~ ~: ~~ 1:~~~=·= : INTESRPv1ewsS WMoeNs. tTHe RrunFRI. i• SERVICE . ~~~;~11:!re''·:d:~.~:~ : ~"'wk. 60-8464 OI' 6'>0fi15 •Dick, 6'2-1117 Locllttd neat 6(ti frwJ I ISpet11or.. by R1nt~o H1111!111tto11 l11ch Ul'!iO 'I
REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS Sowl '"° Alondr&. ~ Vle i• Womo11'1 Ct~b.I High 5c.heol Di1tritt.I
CA ft11 • i Offlut II Ml•tlo11 Y;1jo Offitet 11 1901 • 17ili I BINET$. Alf¥ 1119 job YOUNG MAN for small H!9h School, 2S025 Ch.;. Str11t • H 11 ot1 119 t • 25 )'n. exper. S43-Q13 ·~ • Attentions bullneu. $2.C» p.r + 11nto o,;.,,, Mi1 1ion Y;. ltoth. Op1n I o.lft .... ;10
REPAIR, PartlOons, Small O...:tom DHi&nl hr. 56-1&86 + 270 I So. Harbor, Santa Ana •lo. Op111 1 O:OO 1.m. • p .111. Mo11dov thro11tll F!I· j ~model, elc. Nile or dt.1, *~'*' ALCOJ.IOUCS A.noeymout • L:OO P·'r· Mond •v lhru d1y oil t11m111er. Phon• I
R.eu! Call KEN 5«>-4679 DAILY PllDl' WANT ADS Phone S0.'217 o..· writ. ro AN EQUAL OPPOlTUNtTY EMl'LOYEl ' Frld.'Y• Pho11t •l0·2•lO. Sl&·,ll 1. :. •I
SOCK JT TO 'EM! WUNG RESUt..TSt P.O. 8mr 1223 o.4a...... I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·!:'·~·::!·~1! ............................................. ,..;91! . -
• •
• • •
•
JOll a llMl!LOYMINT
7400
lllTERlt
PllSOHlll. SERVICE
445 E. 17th St.
Coat• Mes•, Calif.
642-7523
Interviewing
Mon. thru Fri. " a •. m. to s p.m.
Equal cpportunlty emplo)w
John Oi1vlton
421 lrla
Corona del Mar
You att the winner ot
2 tickets to tbe
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR
at the
ANAHEIM
STAOIUM
en JIJlY 4th
Pleue c.11 642-5611, ext. 3'l9
between t and 1 pm to claim
your tickets. (North County
toll.free number l9 S40-1220)
*STATISTICAL
ANALYST 5575-$600
Beach area. SecurltiH I fn.
sunnce. Co. w/tm tbo!lr
spednc f9l~ments. Col·
l@p math or aectg de1lr.
able. 1% ftt pd h)' emp], in
by app. J.R. Pierce Assoc
Agency 1885 Newport. Bl.,
<lma Meta 642-6720
abilities
an Li mite()
agenc;v
Quality POl!tlons for
Qualltled Appllcanta
48S E. 17th St.. Suite 224
Cotta Mesa 642-1470
* RN Charp Nune * HOUSEKEEPER, exp
~rd.
App. in peraon: Lquna
Beach Nursing Home. .,,....,.,
EXPERIENCED help i n
OWTlock, blind stitch, I:
•lna.U! needle. 5 dltl'•/wk.
day shift. hrly, ~· 1621
Alabama. Huntlneton Beach.
MA'nJRE responsible
penon: care tor 4 chldrn in
rny hm; muat have own
trans: 5 dll,)', Wedfl"hun
ott. 60-6467
MAlURE Penon to help
Uvt-ln bou1ekeeper i n
..
'I
Newport Air Assocl1f1s
Fllfe School & Flying Club
UARN TO FLY
$500.
C ....... l .. A..n.Me1
Coll'lploto C1111i1rto l~lutilon
40 Hours flight time In C•ssna 150'1 with
20 hrs. dual instruction. Club membership,
2 Mont h's free dues, lnd ivi dutl instruction,
teilor•d to YOUR ability.
OTHll AllCIAfT AVAILAIU
9t LOWIST IARS IN OIANCH COUNTY
L•trn to fly now -end h1v• fun!
e Fly Mexico otHI Cm1ada
• Special 1.tn "" c-..lal cuod lllltrulll ... s ........
For Co'"pl.11 Oot1il1 C11I NOW
673. 0313
........ .._,.,..,..
s..u.....as.,.,. .....
Ap1Jrw.10
e Hot l:.alancotf luncho1
e Ho"'o·li•• ofnio1phoro
e Concr1fo I iron pl•'t
CIRTIFllD KINDllGAITEN
IN COSTA MESA -
2 LOCATIONS
1937 Church St.
(1 blk. Hal of Newport •bovo 19th)
Phono: 646-3636
795 P1ul1rino
(2 bllo. W. of Brlatol noor So. Cooat Plara)
Ph-S4C).1919
, ::~~ .... ~~~Ge~~ ~t!tn~~
SEWJNG MACH I NE
Operaton, o:p'd on power
mac.h's, women'•
sportswear. Top pay for
qualilied sewers. 675-25ll
PHONE SOLICITOR
Evening work. No Rlling.
Apply in penon 18585 Ma.In
SL, (S Points Sbopp1na:
Center) H.B.
REAL Estate Salesmen why
not sell i be trained in the
hotteat atta -Huntington
Sn.ch. Call Phil McNamee
962-44n Village Real Estate
'SPECIAL MACHINE
operator
Sporbwl'ar. Top ~·
642-'666
'.Anna's
Pr .. School -1st Grade
ANNOUNCES
F•c.ilitles for Enlarged Enrollment
Register your lltUe ones for:
• A full (fun) L11rnin9 Program
• Music..
e Art
FUU... Time ~ mother
needs daytime babysitter • Dane.Ing
tor 6 & 1 yr olds. Newport e Cre1tlva Activltlta
Hghll area. Aft 6, MS-7S28
HOUSEWIFE Wanted 9 to 6
~ Tues. Wed, Thurs,
Minimum. Oerk and office
, wort. Ph. 6f2..3)57
e Hot Lunches & Sn1cks
e Attl 2 through 1st 9r1de
, BEAtrl'ICIAN, fill! time; no 2110 Thurln Ave., Costa Mesa Ph: 646-1#4
cllentele requirtd; n e w
iraduate1 welcome. Call
1 Manaier: 548-9919
LEGAL SECRETARY
1 Experience nece11ary
I Write: Box l2!I Balboa Isl..,
' Calif.
: GENERAL Office, type 45
Neat • Pe!Wmablt, Plush
: Ottl<:i!, ~llcnt btnefits
Call Misa Barnard 833-2750
I BEAtrIY OPERATOR
t NEEDED! Apply ln puaon.
Call tor appt. 545-<0'.!9
WAITRESS, OVER 21
Full or part time .......,
e MAJDS • Motel Mlri&:.
lll2l Bay11de Dr.
• Newport Beach • ; BABYSITI'ER • lor 3 ptt.
-boya. Altmooono. ~ Mcn.·Frl 6"-2!& after 6
pm.
HAIRDRESSER Needed
Balboa 1'l&nd lllon.
t ITM232 or m.3101
i C 0 LL EGE Gid-Mother'1
akle. Pref )GI drlw I:
r swim, Jld'L ~1J41
• LICENSED Shampoo sirl.
I a.t. rJttded for but)' aalon,
Wed. thru Sal. 673-3820
o GfNERAL HOURkeeper. 5
, ~ Swedilb. ~ or
II Qermu. fit-1110
~ BARMAID. Strtet Dlitu.
~ Part-time. Wlllinl lb train.
~ S.1651 • 5U-2'J8!
~ ENTERTAINER. 0 r can,
I Piano GultarT Antr I pm
tie'• 43C E. 17th C.M.
--------------·-··
Gvremonl Schoo/
DAY SCHOOL NON-SECT ARIAN
Summer
Enrollment Still Open
Grades I ·8
Experienced
Qualified Teachers
e Phonic. Re1din9 e l11ic Mith
e Reecl &. Spell e En9li1h
e French e Soc.it! Studies
• Delly Swimm ing
261 Monte Vista
Costa Mesa
646.1170 for tppt.
•
--------..--.
Schools and
COLLEGE{BEAUTY
offers only the most advanced1 upd1ted
Courses and Techniques. Your sltllls
will be only u good as the training you
have been given.
New Classes Start Each Tuesday
Register NOW
646-2919
1195 N-rt lllW., Coato Mou
2117 S. Brlotol, Soni• An• ~6'7
Craig Hayes Daniels
16979 Roundhill Drive
Huntington Beach, California
Chilcoal School of typing
173 Del Mar Avenue
Costa Mesa, California,
Dear teacher:
I am 12 years old, and in the sixth ~rade. I
think y.our system is real easy. I wish that
your system would be put in all the schools
so that it would not take four and one half
months to do what I have learned with you
in just 10 lessons. Your typing lessons are
very nice and easy. I'm sure lots of people
would agree with me if they took yo ur typ-
ing lessons, they are keen.
This is the first letter I have typed, and it
will not be very long.
I wish our school would put this typing sys-
tem in the Huntington Beach school and that
you would be the head of the Board of the
Typing Teachers.
Your greaUul pupll.
Craig Hayes Daniela
MEN WANTED NOW
TO TRAiii AS
CLAIMS ADJUSTERS
Insurance investigators are bad I y needed
due to the tremendous increase in claims re-
sulting from auto accidents, fires, floods,
riots, stonns and industrial accidents that
occur daily. Insurance Adjusters Schools of
1901 N.W. 7 Street, Miami, F1a., can train you
to earn top money in this fast moving, excit-
ing, action-packed field , full time or part
time. Work at your present job and study at
home, then attend resident training for two
weeks at MIAMI BEACH, F1orida, or LAS
VEGAS, Nevada. Excellent employment as·
sis tance. For details fill out coupon and mail
today. No Obligation!
Approved for Veterans under New G.I. BUI!
For prompt reply t.Vrite to:
INSURANCE ADJUSTERS
SCHOOLS
Dept. 1203
P.O. Box 476
El Toro, C&lll. 92630.
Name_ .Ai:•--
Addreu ....... -······-·-·--
Clty.·-·-······-··State. __ ,,_
Zip .. _. __ .. .Pho!'lf' ... _. __
Accredited 1.lember NaUonal Home Study Coundl
IAGUNA BEACH
SCHOOi. OF ART & DESIGN
SUMMER
PROGRAM ----.. o..w Sd:1•11 .,.. ...... .., ·--IM._,,H .... ·----.... _ , ... _,.,
TWO.WEEK WORKSHOPS
SIX ANO NINE·WEEK COURllS
P•lntln9, Printmaking, C1r1mlc.1, Lli1
Drawing, S.• I L1nd1c•pe~ RenHrlng,
Chlldrtn'a Art
Write or call !Dr free Brochure
630 Laguna Canyon Road
494-1520
iso..nc. Bock FHI With
ANTHONY SCHOOLS CorHr Trolnl"I
Spocloll1t1 In tli•
FIELDS WITH A FUTURE
Licensing Preparatlon for :
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
• Contraclors (General & Sub) e Securities (NASO) e Fire & Casulty Insurance
Training for : e Legal Secretary * MoteVHotel Managers * Travel Agents
California Department of Education Approved
Most Locations and Courses Approved for Vets
Master Cllfrge and BankAmerlcard Accepted
For Information -FREE Brochure, cell: e ANTHONY SCHOOLS Newport Beach:
Garden Grove: (7141 646-3229
(714) 638""643 HunUn1ton Beach:
Long Beach: (714) w.sm
(213) 423-M21 Tornnei!: (213) 37Q...&571
* INNkllPIRI INITITUTI INTIRNATIONAL
1717 South Brookhurst, Anaheim, •• (714} 776-5800
Medical or Dental Assistant
CALIFORNIA
PROFESSIONAL SCHOOL
• Student Loans e Day and Evening Cl..,ea
• Lifetime Placement Service e For Women of All Ages e Professionally Staffed Dental
Clinic Open To The Public
1895 NEWPORT BLVO., COSTA MESA
(714) 645-2922
Call now for • • •
Summer Program
e Gr.des t-12
• Small Cl11111
• Immediate Attention
• Cl0te Personal Sup1rvi1lon
e Academics required for
College Entr ance
e Rood l"I Clinic, S.R.A. (oll ogH)
e Speclal Summer L1ngu•9e
Program {3 wks. In Mexico)
e Special Aviation
Ground School CourH
BRICKER-WARD ~""""J'
II F•lr Drive, Costa Met•
Phone 540-0420 or ~3515 1ve1.
Summ., Cl•1111 Now Forming
GRADUATES!
PRACTICAL NURSING!
Tuition rt'fund plan
C1n 11rn whll• you l11ri11
Fully Appro•od
NURSIS
TRAINING
INSTITUTE
OF
ORANGE
COUNTY
-On tho Job Hoopit•I Trolnlng -
-Medical A11l1tlng -
-~ & lnatltutlonol Coro -
-F-PIHtmont -
4016 W. COMMONWEAL TH, PULLIRTON
Phone 525-7521
COME SAIL WITH US I
11> OFF ON FAMILY RATES
le1m ~o 1111· on 24' Sloop,•
Courses tlvtn:
BEGINNING
INTERMEDIATE
AND ADVANCE D
Sailing techniques.
The 1tudtnt is introduced to th• fu nd1ment1l1
of 11 llln9 ebo1rd 261 ke1I S1ilboah, H'e b ...
com•• femiller with the bo1t1 response to the
movements of the helm and l11rn1 the IM1ic •
t1chniqu11 of 11ilin9 the bott to windwaNI
and before the wind.
CALL FOR FUU. lNFORMADON
SOUTH . COAST . YACHTS
1100 W.t Poclftc C-t Hlt••oy
NIWPOIT llACH MS.1 UJ
Now Accepting
Appllc.tloM For Tho
SUMMIR SISSION -... -Commenclnt
July 9th, 1969
lt .. lttr•tlen JulJ 7th & lttl . ...,,,....... .... ,......
ORANGE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE of LAW
(Affthte ,.,,_,. .. c.llete)
Vincent S. Oalsimer1 Dean
A St•f• Ch1rffr•d No11-l'r•fit h11tllufl•11 •r•p•rillf St.-
4il1nh for tho C.llforrii• l •r b•Mlnatlori. Et1f•rl119 Sh•
4il•nf1 111u1t h•Y• • h4lnhn1i1111 Pr•·Llt•I Ellli.•••io11 .,
Eq1i1lv•l•nt 11 R•qulr.O Ir/ th• C1llfor11I• St1to l•r.
Four Y11r Protr•m 111 ,,.,,..,.
Lo1dl11g to J , 0. IJurl• D•cf•r) D•trff
Call or visit the campus
a141 S31.as11
12345 WESTMINSTIR AVINUI
SANTA ANA
GJ .JJarNI/
STUDIO of CHARM
And MODELING
Pbone for FREE Broebare oa
44SECRETS OF BEAUTY"
5t1.,.,. C.._ Now .........
H..-i: t ..... tot p.a
Count approued I "':::..":" I
---bVIM
Calif. Supl of 1'11bllc l111tr. * Mot1.n.., ...i Tolmlloo *c"°""&r..-u .. .....,.,. * -1 ... s_..Uttt. n-. * Speelal c-for H-"., * ear-· Cilrta
FLOllNCI SMALIS
Director of Our St.ate Ltctnaed
MO<Ullng Aa'"'V
' Ult N. Malo, s.N A-1474971
1t65 Su11oy Croat Dr. 15-y H .. VIiia'°)
,,..,_ lt7·1000
COPRr
on the
beach
Of
Balboa
COPRE' SCHOOL Announc ..
SPRING OF 1970
Europe1n Study Progr1m
for quolllylng Junlon a Senion
Ttaillll ror fall enrollment now ln prGll'IM:
SUMMll SEISION
JUNI JM ttw'v AUOUIT 11t
• Art
• Convtnatlonal Spanbh
• TYPllll
• !tftn<dlol Moth IUld EncUob
710 Int Ocun Front B1lllH, C1UI. nMI
""' 67~10
----------..-----------· --~c---· . __ .,.._,, ---------
DU.V I'll.CIT T-. M 24, 1'6' 'li,i'"i .•m~OOTIJJ~!!!]·~~~~~"~Jilioiilu .. EMPLOYMENT JOIS .. EMPLOYMENT JOIS .. EMl'l.OYMINT MIRCHANDISI l'Oll MEICHANOISI FOil MERCHANDISI' FOR M ERCHANDISE FOil ,...._ ........ H~...,:.;..~ •----------------SALE AND TltAOi SALi AND T••"f SA. LE AND TRADE SALE ... ND TllADI :: ..... .._ 1-Jail• .M.t, Woa 7500 1-;....;.... ___ ...;....o,.;;........;;;.;.;.;;.::;..;.:;.;;:;...;-".,....:;;::~--I '.;
7400 Holp Won!H Holp Wontocl Fumltv... IOOO ~"""""'" IOOI !'umlturo 8000Furnfluro IOOO "' iiiCiiiOiiiA•s·rA·L,.1 -~;GHE; Fs;r-"r;;,A-Ll~-l~~-R~t-7 Check Here · a DAYS LEFT!! r.r11~~~ :.'
7400
* J.C. _OJ.
Fuhloohbnd ·
N ....... lleach
*
AGENCY NIWPORT BEACH ADMINISTRATIVE WITH THI TeclrilltJ Down 9'illdlnt to u ~ -
SECRETARY J b K' I Make Rqom For Our New ·store DECORATOR GETS CA (tUATION ;;: KEYPUNCH $543. to* sw. o 1ngs. sPAN~H •• MEDITERRANEAN oF .u Luxu1v APl ·rMENTS • NEEDS PART 11Ml:
SALESLADIES
Houtowlw• & Mothors can )'OU Qah' a 1eW boUl"I
each da.y and add to the
family income 111 the same
time f S .. hedule1 conyenif!nt
kt )'OU, momings, alt~
::S·o1~a0.rm;o: ~m:
atare UOOer the finest of
condltlona and top rupervls--
A MEMBER OF
SllEWNG &
Sfllllll6, INC.
World's la'lelt
profet.s Iona I
employrMnt service I
Harbor II Adims
Costa Mesa
OPERATOR . 1 $75,000 CUAJANCE Spiniih & Mediternne; n FU...tturt
PERSONNEL MALE • Wood game sets from $1119.95 e guar. ALL BRAND NEW
With a m inimum Of
one yHr't experience
on IBM oqulpmont. .
ff 'UG HES
NEWPORT BEACH
SOO Superior Avenue
Nawport S.ach, C•lif,
TECHNICIAN mattresses $19.95 • Spanish dinette set •
$69.95 • 3 pc. Spanish bedroom aeb fW.95 :i=1:~¥.;-::=:;;-,Soi;~.~'1Nl'L7'tr-:-
$53J. ': uu. Conunercill • Spanish ~b1e tamps $12.95. ~<J:Or::r-~~~ :.~~.::·~~:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·~~~ ... 1.:ft::
REQUIREMENTS Remainder of Huge.stock: et terrific savings! J!.~~'1: .. ~.JRtl'.~~lN.fli:::;:::::::.~ 11t:C:
Typl"" 60 wpm, ohorlhand Conlrollot' lrom $700 No down -t•...,,. to "'"' your budgot -d d L... d" I ~' 90 wpm. Fringe bend.lb; bank fine; Ma ... r Char6, Bank of America. A ecorato r ream nuvse. on 1sp ay -~ l2 d•-paid vacation -r Acct.g dqrtt, familiar f S "sh fu ·•·re (w•SI yr ;;;; 12 ..,.. ..., .:kk all upoc1". . or Store horgo. rooms o gorgeous pam rni.u •
l••v• ""yr, major m<di-Soln $600 + • Thl1 Solo For Stoel< on Hind Only.• reg • .$·1295.00
cal Insurance policy. Collete beckground, &ales SACRIFICE $398 FOR INFORMATION . exper;en.,.. • • • 0 0 0
' ' -.
• ' •
APPLY IN PERSON
PENNEY'S
FASHION ISLAND
540 6055 Equol opportunity
• • l-•'•m•p•loy_•_• __ M_&_F_
~t~:. =:e:·= In• s.1 .. Trnee to $650 • • • • • "'o MOMl!Y DN. 1tEOUIRED -WE CAR1tY ~ (llliYlrt M:Cl'I.
~~~ f.:~~~:. •ood • • • • m f.il FURNITURE Secretary
for &Illes <>ftic.e. ~rill of.
flee, good typing oo Exec.
much telephone, 1/h lite. To
$500. Call Sally Hll.11
EXPERIENCED
e ESCROW e
SECRETARY
Tr•lnee tO $650 • : '• • 1 fl&il
Sharp, colleg• 1844 Newport Blvd.11a:. ••• u
* ESCRO'<'.{
OFFICER
10AMto5PM
Monday thN Frida1
AD 5tudl!nt positkms filled.
Equal opportunity employer Teller UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
Pomtlon available tor per-
sonable individual with loan
proceuing experience.
Knowledge oJ new 11c<:ounts
and related S It: L duties
prefen-ed. TYJlf 50 wpm.
Excellent working condJ.
tions and fringe benefit!.
Please call Mr. Lewl, Jor
appointmP.nl, &12-47U.
Mgr T r"" $450
High ochool grad. JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT JOBS" EMPLOYMENT Costa Mesa only
Technical Jobe-Mon, Wom. 7500 Job Propor•tion 7800 1 .. .., Night "Til 9 -Wed., s.1. ~Su•. "TD' New 11Ct.'0Unta, thorough & * per!analM varied duties +
J'!!"""'J!~~~~""""' llOmf! bll.nk knolwedge. To
BANKING $<00. Call Sally Hart.
*
Position immediately
•veileble for an NCR
450 proof operator, at
our Newport Center
Branch. Experienced
preferred.
PLEASE APPLY
550 Newport Center Dr.
Newport' Bf!ach
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL BANK
Position open to
men 11.nd women
Equ.lli opportunity employer
e EXPERIENCED e
NEW ACCOUNTS
CLERK
UNITED CALIFORNIA
BANK
Secretary
Girl with pleasant personal\·
ty & good spelling, variety,
typing & s/h for N.B.
Engineer. To $4.50. Call Sally
Hart.
Soc:tyt Logol
Superior 5kills for superior
office. Make a change up!
Benefit&. Start $325. Call
Ann Williams.
Senior Clerk
Front office v.-ork, knack
with figures. good math. Na·
tionll.l co. o!fen real plus!
$500. Cll.ll Sally H&rt.
General Office
HandJf! money, lite bkkpg.
Well known finn oUers good
co. benefits. $300. Call Sa.Uy
Hart.
SKretary
Front oUice girl v.ith good
«i67 MacArthur B1vd. sk!.11&, will find real Of>"
Newport Beach stO-l4U portunity; l..oClll co. To $500.
-sHARP GAL-Call Sally Harl
Looking for 11 pennllnf!nt Secret1ry
pog\tion with llif! grooviest IBM Executi,·e exp &: stable
boutique in Orange County. work background for &ales
Must be experienced in hi-office. Alert. type. $500. cau
f as h i on dre11f!s It Ann Williams.
sportswear. U you qullilfy,
call tor appt: THE LOOK. Secretary
644.2400 Small <>ffice. At ease on
·-.~~.~0-0~K~K=EE=P~E=R-phooe, aocu ... to typiog •
110me shorthand. Start to
Experienced, ptirt time $425. Call Ann \Villiams.
• FOOD Socty to Pr11idonl CHECKER Hf'avybookketplngn.
J l to 4 pm perience, light shorthand,
673-2930 type 50 wpm. To ;525. Call
Part or fUl.l tiJflf! 10 women
~ Unmed. for child
Clll"e, aides or companions.
Age 21-65
Sitting Pretty Agency
Member of We Sit Bettu,
lDc. subsidiary o~ Gerb!:r
Arm Wil.J..iams.
Teller
Plush new bank with future
oppty for gal with good
personality. Start $412. Call
Ann Williams.
Prod. Co. 642-327-4 Bookkeeper
1--,s.c.--1y,._. "'$500"'~. ss=50.---ruu charge ·-payah'"
A top beach area <XI, ii look· general led&:er. Top benefits, ~for 1111 attracttve gal with ~~~~ to $550. Call Ann
toad lf!C. skills, iireat pt>
tenlia.l and the co. will re-Medical Assistant
imburse lhe fee. Cllll ~ Plll1. tir full Ume. Know
tlline, Merchants Penonncl Medicare & medical. Lovelv
Agency, 2043 We1tclW Dr., offlt'e. To $433. Call AM
N.B. 64!>-2770. \VWiams.
General Office $450
Good typllt, know calculator. Secretary
General office duties. Com· Ex!!CU tlve J..mt 60 wpm or
PllllY will reimburse the better. Busy office, op-
fee. CllU Lon.ine, Merchants pnrtunity lo advance. $500.
Personnel Ag1!ncy, 2043 Call Ann Willl11.111S,
WestcllU Drive, N.B. 645-2770 Tollor fAbo fee jobe) I"'"""""'"""""""""-New bank. Friendly ou~!ng personality willing lo do any &!e Betty BJ'UCe' at
m66Gxec
Agency lot Career Girl.II
410 W. Coast Hwy .. N. B.
By appoint 646-3.939
assigned ;!ob. $400. Call Ann
Williams.
Secty/Legal
Good background in genen.I
law ln Cal!(. will get you a
top spot in H.B. Joe. Goe1 to
$600. Call Ann Williams.
3141 E. c .. 1t Hwy
Corona del Mar
673-9240
F.qual epportunlcy employer
e e EXPERIENCED
-TELLER-
UNITED
CALIFORNIA BANK
309 Main, Hunt. Bch.
"36-&!ll
F.qual opportunity employer
COLLEGE GlRL
Needed now for part time
employment this summer.
Clerical duties in busy of.
fice, Four hours per day·
rn<>ming or afternoon. Apply
at the DAILY PJWf, 330
Pl•nt Engr to $5 hr
Electrical or co. license.
Good mechanical back·
ground.
Glendale Estlmotor, Mnhlno
Shop to $4 .SO hr
Min 3 yn exper in job
Fed I Sa • or machinf!. shop. era vrngS Rolrig Ropoirm•n
llU Nowport Blvd. to $200 wk
Costa Mes., Calif, Domestic exptrlence.
Sr Inspector to $170 wk
An Equal Opporturuty 1i-1ust have foundry back·
Employer ground. ---~~----I Maint Man, $3.36 hr
EXPERIENCED 2nd shift, strong electro
mech background.
e NOTE TELLER Woldor $2.2S hr e PART TIME Not certified. Goo d
TELLER chanct> ror advancement
for right man.
UNITED Warehouseman to $500
CALIFORNIA BANK 11-fust have previous WB.re·
\Vest Bay Street, Costa 222 Oce11.11 Ave., L&guna. Bch.
lofe&a, f.1rs. Greenman, or 49~546
house exper, doing ship.
ping &: receiving.
call 642-4321 f e r a> -~~~==~~-1 ee NEEDED po intment.
RECEPTIONIST
Cordless switchboard, lite
typing, pleasant personality.
Exf)f!riencf! helpfuJ but no t
Two Office Girls
Must be 21 11.f'ld able to drive
Finishing Foreman
TrainM $2.50 hr
'Vlll hf! forem11n in finish~
Ing dept. familiar with
layout.
nee, "ill train. Good co. APPLY
benefits, located near Or-186 East l&th St.
Unskilled
ange County Airport. Con-Costa f.lesa
tact Mrs Lounsbery, 540-5550 =-·I
f.fon·Fri before 4 pm. A11t/Secty $400
e FR 00 Beaut Irvine area .ro. Xlnt Y C K • growth position. Friendly
Factory Tralnets
$2.25 hr.
FEMALE
Graveyard shUt. 2 )Tg exp.
J1eavy breakfast. Good sal· atmosphere. can Edee, Steno/Secty to $2.75 hf'
ary for iood emplyees. 18 54'6-S410 Shorthand 100, in sales
or over. Please apply in JASON BEST dcpt. customer service person. Employment Agency background.
CO'ITAGE t'OFFEE SHOP 2120 So. f.tain, Santa Ana _ O rder Clerks to $2.95 hr
562 W. 19th St , CM HOUSEKEEPER & babysit· High school gr11.d, prior
• HOSTESS/CASHIER e ter for mothtrless home, clf!rica.J exper.
CoUee Shop. J...arp delUXf! OM child. 646-30l3 afL 4 Genl Office $2. hr
ho I pm. te . Experience required. Good work bft.ckground.
Contact Jim Demaio in DREAM Job· Keep your lm· person portant job aa wile & Gen Ofc Trnee $2 hr
NEWPORTER INN mother & earn 11 wkly Type 40+, will train
110'1 J bo pavrheck. 544.38$4, 6.16-3497 sharp girl. am rec Rd., N.B. ..~
SHOE SALES managf!t MATURE manied girl need· Recpt/Secty to $500
trainee. America's largest ed to v.'Ork. 11ervlce 5Upply Front office, shorthand,
relallers ol women's shoes. store. ?>lust be Z1 or over. working for 3 men.
LEEDS Shoe Store, So. 540-9373 Stat Typist to $450
Coast Plaza. Contact Mr. •• SECRETARY, transcri~ R"al sharp gal, statistical
Phelp! tion experience. Sm 11 l I, type 60+·
WOi\tAN v.·ith general fac· private school. Cllil 673-8610 R.scpt to $500
lory &: assembly. Specialty LADY Companion, very light Front orfl ce, type 60 on
Mold('rs, 7U Y or k t o w n , hskpng. 2 days per wk. IB1.1 Exec.
ll.B. steady. gd. pay. Irvine area. NCR A /R Clerk $80 wk
ORTHODONTIC Assist/Sec. 833-2428 after 9 am Bkkpg. background help-
Costa Mesa are&. Exper. or Fishing Rod Wrappers ful.
C.011 . pref. but nol nee. CaU Experienced. Top pay. Keypunch $85 wk
or leave mes&. 642-7325 Browning lolfg. Co. Will take sharp gal out EXP=""'E°"R"'r"'E"'N°'CE=o~M~.~,~.-,-.~11 1919 Placentia, C.M. 548-llTI KP school.
Transcripti<>nist &. front of· LITE Cleaning B 11 y front Typist $90 wk
lice girl; Radk>logy office, Trailer. $1.IJI. 6 hn: wk. Good oppcrtunlty f or
Newport Be11ch. 642-&164 Ov.'n trans. 546-7331 sharp g11l with good typ-
EXPER'D teenage r:i rl ~PB~x-.-,,.-w~ .• -,.-r-.. -.,-,~.,~.,,.~f.' ing skills.
v.·anted, 2 clays wk for S r.10 Varied shifts, steady \\'Ork. Genl Ofc Mgr fr $400
old child cart'. 673--5964 HB area. 531H1881 F /C bkkpg. general ot-
WOfo.1AN \Vl\h general fac· WAITRESS wanted over2i' lice procedure.
to~ & assem bly. Specialty Steer 'n Stein, ~4 Edinger, Secretary $400
Molden: 712 Yorktown, llB. H.B. Apply in person. Gener11.I off Ice back·
ENTERTAINER •• Organ, EXPERIENCED Single Nee-ground, shorthand &: typ.
Piano, Guitar? After 6 pm, die Operators. Apply: 825 ing.
Scottie's, 436 E. 17th. C.1'f. W. 18th St., Costa Mesa. Secretary $450
e MAIDS • Hotel/Motel WAITRESS, ('Xp. Apply in Shortha.nd &: typing, sec• relllry to loan officer. lNSTRUCTR~
young, matun: girl, neat a~
peuance. Muzt be abl,f! to
mef!t and deal with people
(part lime available) apply
in person: 18585 Ma1n St. (5
Point& Shoppln&: Center),
H.B.
Experience. $1.85 hour. persolJ. Swiss Chalet, 414 N.
Exec Secty to V.P. ===Ca=n=rn.="='='==:.'..'=N=•wpo~=rt=B=lv=d= .. =N=.B=·==J Dictaphone S.cty $400 Skilled w I <'Onslructi<>n , Be 11.ble to 'vork on own,
ba.ckground for grow 111 g Help Wanted Help Wanted make decisions, engr.
Newport Beach company. Women 7400 Women 7400 background.
Goes to $550. Call Gloria ;..·==================:;! Stenot Jr, $310
Kay. Shorthand. t~ping. good
MARRIED? TOO MANY
B I L L S f Permanent.part
timf! help Wllnted In snack
bar. Stt 11'111.nqer after 7:30
pm. Paulo Drive I n
Theatf!r, 305.l Newport Blvd,
CM.
DENTAL as.slstant I Rere-
tary Lquna Hills • Leisure
World an:a. All phases mu-
tered. $475-SSQJ start. Rf!-
PJne, P.O. Box 10915. Santa
Ana 9271.l. Replif!s strictly
<onlkleotW.
WANTED bab)'s:ltter for in-
Wrt -""'""-""' bDmt University Parlt Ill·
ea. Utl! ha.ltn. 8J3.001. alt·
Secretary
Legal background, !tarts
Aug 1st, atlJ'llctlve, very in-
telligent & Milled. Will go to
!600. Call Gloria Kay
Secretary
lo 3 architects in C.M. Han-
dle II.II oJfice Vllliety. SIH
not llC<.'eSSll.J')' for alert gll'L
To $520. Call Gloria Kay
Clerk/Typist
wl tome bookkceplng, much
telephone & front otfice 1'p-
pellrll.llCe. Greal var I et y.
Goes to $525. Call Gk>ria
Koy.
Adv Artist
"' 12. for lndu1trlal an firm. Goud
GIRL Wanted, Sectttaria.l drawing It line v.-ork. Sharp
~ Prtf. rtcr:nt l!)T. Flexible hn, s-t per
HS IJ1ld. Jnttt"V>e.w1 I am to hour. Call Glorla Kay.
10 .. am, CRJT!'ER.S JNC., BA w. JTih St., CM Adv Exec Secty
NASSEU!lE Skllled &irl able to handle
llUIC bl Ucitnled lull oU. dutiet tor smal1
Am In -llll8S MoJn aa-ney. WW ao to l500, Call
IL, (S ,_ Sbopptor Gloria"'>'·
(llftllrJ H.B. Secretary
PAllT n. """"'°""' Good leg'1 '"clcgrouod. Top
..,.,., ..... lal'L Appl)' '>'Pinc It Slh. dktaptr...."'e. uot IWW 8hd. CM <>Mee w/much ya r l f: t y ,
llOl=."'wo" •'PA &;;:illf J RJitit ctrt ID SS'25. ea.u .;1ona
cbllt ""'..., lldi. -,.. Koy. v-a:a.-•
. '
>
ASSEMILERS
ELECTRONIC
4'SSEMILERS
V11i1n 01!1 M1c.h1n11, loc.1t1d In 1 new 1ir c.onditlon1d
pl111! 1t th1 lrvl111 l11d111trl1I Co111pl1• of Or1n91 Cou11ty
n11r lh1 1irporl, h11 11v1r1I l1111111dl1!1 op1nin91 for
1l1c.tronic. 1u1111bl1r1, lit 1hlft !J:JO A.M. to 4:00
P.M.) 111d l11d thi ft 4:1$ P.M. to 12:4S A.M.I .... a.bl1.
W1 would pr1f1r you to know fht c.ol or c.od1 ind co111•
pon111h.
Goo.fl "•rti119 r1!1 111d 1•c11!1111 co111peny b1n1f11t :11.
c.lu di119 I } d1y1 v1c1tion d111int th1 I 11 Y••• of 1111•
ploy1111nt, 1lock purch1t1 progr1111 ind 1 holid1y v1co1•
lio11 f11turin9 111111 p1id for ti1111 off from Chri1tm11
D1y to th1 Mo111f1y followint N1w Y11r'1.
II yoy 1r1 9oln9 to work or ••• now working, wlri., 11of
1i ... 11li91t1 lh1 OPll'Ortuniti11 •• V.D.M, • 9ood pl1c1 lo
wor•.
Interviews Daily
fr om 8 A.M . to 5 P.M.
Ask for Linda Clerk
Varian Dala Machines
A YARIAN IUISIDIARY
2722 Michelson Drive
(San Die go freew•y to J.mboroe olf-r1mp,
I block So. lo Michelson Drive.)
oonortunlty tor sh 11. r p
girl.
Ro nt•I Clerk $350
Front office, good per-
11on1tll ty, chance for ad·
v&ncement.
Factory Trnee $1 .75
lsl I. 2nd shifts. Good
m11th bft.ckground.
HousekHper $1 .75
C e n e r a I h<>usekeeP,ing
dqtie1 In hospital. •
Draper;' Workera $1 .75
Some •xpertence ln dra· ... ..,.
Sewing Mlchine
Oper•tor Trnffl. $1.75
Knowlcdae of M!Wing mt•
chine & 1ewtng lnltnlc-
tloru.
Work near home!
APEX
Employmont Agonc:y
*The easy way
(••k us why)
1173 HARBOR BL VD.
( V. block So. of 19th)
COST A MESA -342•
J
Consultant to $575, newport .
personnel
. , agency
TECHNICAL
Dept head for fina.nciaI & A I' estate planning, a:oOd t.YP-PP 11nces 8100 Pianoa & Org•n•
ing + figure appilude, some ___ *_S_A_L_E_* __ _
8130
POSITIONS
Many professional • tech-
nical poailions available.
Call M. Baughman, 642.J810.
833 Dover llrive
Newport Beach
FINANCIAL
INSTITUTION
IS
college required, will train . right person, in, fee pd., call New \Vashers • ~1yers . Disll·
Loraine, Merchant& Person· v.•ashers · Refngerators.
nel Agency, 2Gt3 Westclill CERTIFIED
Drive., N.B. 645-mo APPLIANCE
MERCHANDISE FOR 333 EH.St 17th SL,
SALE AND TRADE Costa t.tesa. 6.i2.():2.IQ
RCA Whlrlpool Relrig. 15.4
Furniture 8000 cu. ft . Like new, $100. Also ---------I paintings, Lamps, Chairs,
OVER·STOCKED many mtscellanrous. 1108
W. Bay Ave. Balboa Pen.
MUST SELL! LADY Kenm o r e auto
New 9 pc. oorner atTang. \Vasher, turquoiSC", I a I e
choice of clrs. reg. S230, now mod., xlnl cond. S 8 O,
$149.50. Headboards: Kings 847-8U5
$15, Queens $12.50, F'ull R~E~F~R~I~G~E~RA~TO=R-14-,-, -,,
SI0.50, 'l'wins $3.95, New 7' Hotpoint, 8 yn; old S!Ja. Xlnl
round bed w/legs, velvet cone!. Avail J une 2 8.
1969 WURLITZER
CONCERT ORGAN . •
l2 Note pedals. Less than 3 ·
n1on!hs old. Paid $4995 •
Asking $3250. See al;
Gould Mus ic Company zMs No. Maln, SA 547.()681
WANTED
SPINETS & GRANDS
""36211
Television 820S
ANTIQUE \Vhltc, Packard
Bell Color TV, beaut large
cabinel, xlnt cond. $l)O.
673-!Q7
Sporting Goods 8500
moving to Huntington Beach.
1lie beautiful new offices
need 1111 11ckUUon to the gtaff
who hlls S&.L or Bank exper·
ience. Se.laty commensurate
with experience. Call Per·
90noel (2i.3j 67&0150
headboard It: spread \V/ re· 673-1551 SURFBOARD SALE
~.rse ~am, ~,!m quil
1
tro
1
. P""I"O"'N"E=E=R-lu7.ll-y -,-,-to-. 7.11~.,-.. -r $110 7'6 Flav.·Jess Harbour
.... .,...,.., now ,._., comp e e. __ _..1. U d 8 Sold Rapier • others. 846-9527 New beds: King $99.SO, 1.:uuul loner. se mo... _
SCRAM-LETS ' .
ANSWERS ·
Q S89 50 Full $49 50 home do not need. Cosl $625, CM.tPINC equip: Propane ~eens $39 50 'tun · • sell $300. 673-7084 stove. cooking kit, lantf'rn,
Spa:h lo'ng'. bo~ ~=~ LADY Kenm o re auto etc. 2SJ Del Mar Ave.~ CM.
soh, hand carved "'Ood, washer, copper!one, late 8' CUSI'OM s ur f b o & rd
beaut. uphol reg, $449.50, model, xlnl cond. $95. perfccl condition; l year old i
Behead -Valid -Mavis -now $329. Klng·size spreads, 847-8115 S50. 847~1
Banter -ADVERTISE choice of colon;, reg. S20.95, REF R I C ER AT 0 R S40 ~--~-~-·~·===~==8=6=00=1 ,
A city child, upon seeing now $12.99, SIESTA SLEEP Free7.er S60, P\'. pty. call Miscella neous 1 his firs1 rainbow in the.coon. SHOP, 1927 Harbor Blvd .. after 5 pn1. 536-6957
try, 11skf!d, "Whllt'a it sup. Costa fl.1esa, 645-2760 daily NEW d"h "-& I -~ t ADVERTISE•• 10-9 Sat 10-6. . "'.'as,..,r c ec ~ 0 • ' ===-~----1 range, stiU 1n cartons. lolake * NEW FA1..1LITY * SPANISH Returned from offer. 962-4565, ~S-1~2
CONTINENTAL MANOR Model Homes on aalf! al =========
LAGUNA BEACH less thlln wholesale! Group Antiques 8110
Permanent and immediate lncludes beautiful 9 6 • • -~------
employment: Housekeepers, quilted 110(a &: love seal, THOMAS Edison grama-
kitchen helpers, relief CXIOk, 3 Spanish oak decorator phon(' 3rd p I a y l' r pro-
janitor (main!), &<>clal and tAbles, rwa& or tabla lamp.s, duced, pat. late lSOO's. Perl.
re-crtatlon directo1·, PBX wall placque, king, queen. cond. with horn. Plays Y•ell
QJ>l!rator (nights). Company or lull alz.e bedroom suite wt 5 play~ cylinders.
benetHa. Pat wad J 0 w, rompleta ind tm springs, P..1ake oUcr. Call Chris
714-8630, 494-9458 mattress, linens & boudoir 66-2069 aft 5.
*AUCTION*
I! you will sell or buy , ,
gtve WJndy a tr:.· ~
Auctions Friday 7:30 p.rn. j
Windy's Auction Barn 1
Behind Tony's Bldg, Mat1.
20Ta1h Newpoprl, CM 64&.s686
HAND TOOLS
• Socket sets e Circular )
saws e DriU motors e Car t
polishers & i>anders i
United Rent All : SALES: all ages, home furn, lamps, Spanish oak 6 pc K'~IN=G'""'"U>'"u"i•'"""'X""l"V-, °"9-P<-~di~n l
It: prod. ,seU di&count. no dining aet priced elsewhere room set. X!nt cond. 50 no \V. 19th St.. Costa f.1esa
compel. may work from at 11pprox. $1195.00 ALL Yell.I"!I old. Prv pr t y. 64.S.0760
home, your hours. We train. FOR ONLY SJ99, $20 down, 832-0261 i·tOVING : redwood trestle 1
no Q'per. nee. Need sales $4.99 pt!r ~M:k ' <>ut <>fl===·======' I table & benches, $8. Anti-1
personnel full or pt-tm. Mr state credlt Olt \V 111 Sewing Machines 8120 qucs, n1in'Ors, !ables, comic -;j SW!Ul.!On 968-5929 separate for quick sail.'. 20thl---'---_;__.c__.;._;c h' II e. " Century Furniture, 9 7121969 SINGER with zig-1~1g & t·s iris · ....... ntic sweat.
BEAUTICIANS shir1s SZ. Alens & Ladies r i Garden Gro\•e BI v d ., walnut console. Makes but-
BE YOUR 0\VN BOSS. Rent Garden Grove Daily 10.9, ton holPs, drs1gns t'!c., S5.Z5 sporlshirls, SL Jl e cor ds 1 '
i;pace in Huntington Beach Sat 10-6, Sun 12-S Come mo . or S36.00 cash. 52S-f.6lfi clo1hi11g. c~c. 1301 Bonnie ;
Salon. Reasonable. 847·91~ ,_ _,, n Doone T,crr. CdM 10-5 I '"or" ..... C 4) S30-5240 SINGER Sewing n1achinc t ~•,.."°oo""=anytl""""'"m_•~·~-~~ CHEST Of d r a w e r s , rentals. S5 mo. Fre(' pickup 16 CU 11 Coldspot deep.freeze
CLERK Exp'd · lling lchest !"""~ 11, ..,,. old $80. • in se Designer new teak furn: & delivery. Call 526-6616 .;r-.;•
oommercllli stationery &: oU desk, chairs, 2 dressing _ Dix bar bell M't comp!, :
supplies. TIDE OFFICE tbles & misc. 673-821.5 Musical Inst. 8125 almost new. Sl5. \\'hile port. '
SUPPLY 30ll N e w p o r t ----liC\\'ing-mar.h, used once,
Blvd., N.B. MATCHI~? .. Joveh. "n' lals, Guitarll • Amps • ~rums $60. \Vood din nn table, 4 :
never u....... ore Id or ., NE\V AND U!'ED chairs. $45. 646-1932 Hit!~!~u:~n:rp~ ~~~~~7-So:J75; Oil 12 MAJOR B RAN ~S HOTPOINT auto washer,.
Busy shop, XJnt Io c . Also f.1any l1npor!s At Easy Iul!y auto. dryer.
Contessa Hair Fashions MOVING to Hawaii, must BIG DISCOU NTS Nol"J!r upMght 1 r ~ e z er .
675-3385 sell! King ne bt-d S50, TV EVERYTHING IN MUSIC Lightuher hanging lamp.
stereo $60. i;:as dryer $Ei0. • £'Ice roHCf' pol, 2 wall
BEAtrrY °"'"'" """'"'· a.trig. sro . ..,..n; Beach Muuc Center ''m''· 2 '"'" L~,,., ""'"· deluxe beauty Salon. No. 19 Qu&lity king brd, quilted, 67'."r-424 1
Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Complete, unu5ed S98; worth Daily 12 noon !ill 9. Sa.!, !l-5
Lag. Niguel l{ll.ir Fashion $250. After 5 or wknds 17404 Beach Blvd. Uf\\'Y. 3:11
49'.J-2221 847--0406 11,j mi so. Slln Dicg<1 F11y.
THE DORYMAN needs help, DOUBLE ,._.. . Huntington Beach 847-8536
21 & "-1 canopy ......... ,. white, <>ver, must ....., &mar complete, S90. Oft I G I NA L pro I otyp
and clean. Apply in person .. 54:,.5292 * Fender J rignar Gui l a r
2100 W. Oceanrront, N.B. \V/amp $95. \Viii take trans
RELIEF COOK DANISH leak buUet, new, car in trade. 515 llamillon,
Park Lido ~Too long for room. G l .
Convalescent Center . . LUD\\'IG Dn1m ~t \vith 1
&42-8044 DREXEL Proltlc round din. Cildjan Crai::h Cym))al onlv. FtCeoo~.~,-,.-.,.-r-.~P-1-.-,-m • nn ta~le, ~ chrs. & buffet. $170 or best oiler. c.ilt
Pl'.!rm. Exper. Pay/It, Tav al90 Ml.SC. ltl'.!ms. 644-2459 5'19-1314.
R. P&L. Bill. & r.~. f.f AH 0 GAN Y Breakfront =========
&i2-9890 NB di-op 11'.!nf I ab I e • 4 Pia nos & Organs 8130 up~lstered chai~. 546-9234
EXPERIENCED Fry Cook. LARGE 11u mirror cocktail GULBRANSEN
J\1ornlngs, no Sundays or table 38 inches. 646-9898 ORGANS
holidays.. 512 w. l9th St., WURLITZER
C.M. . Ollko Equlpmont 8011 PIANOS & ORGANS
Schools-Instruction 7600 Pianos & Ori:an!I Ren1cd r ICTAPHONE transcriber EVERYTJ llNG L'l 1'1USIC
used one mo. New $465 Mer. 1 for $200. Elect. 11.dd~ , (
ma<h. ,,. "'" 646-951• Beach Music enter days: 64l-M95 •
DRIVING LESSONS
As low as $S.7S per wetk w/
pay later plan. Free home
pickup. Stcurlty Driving School, t-526-2233. Addressograph -Elliott Factory Sales Sr Service
with r;upplles, service Daily 12 noon 'Lil 9, Sat 9-5
a DRJVJNG·LES.SONS TI4-52JO 174!).I Beach Blvd .. (Hwy 39J
Fi.tit lea<>n tree~ =========11\ii ml. So. San Diego 1'"\\'Y,
WDnten k teenagct'll our St E • 1 8012 llunting)on Beach 847-8536
I p e c I 11 I I y t II • ASTRO _0_r.c• _ _,qu_o_,p_m_•_n __ __; ~1)1 MARKIIT ...,,,, ''" ,.,., JUNE SALE!!!
8'4" SUR!-"BOJ\RD, needs
l'<'Palr ~:lo. 10· surfboard, -
xlnt rond, $33. 3" reflector
l('l('S('O~ 11 / !ripod, $20.
002-7514 ••
CltYST AL S !cn11vare
Fosroria Candle1vlck, 8 •
11·incs, 8 gobleta;, S:l each.
673-!1461
\\IEDDING Go1\'n, full skirt,
loroi': slV! & train, like new,
sz 8. A~lo veil and hoop slip.
646-1097 n!t 5 wkdys , '1 anytime wknds.
GAS SIOVf', 10 X 12 rug, •
sliclini:?" tioor shut1ers. din rn1
lit;hl, \\·ht metal kit cabinet.
5'1~>-1006
3.'i FT \1AN.
Ideal lor
\\'Orkshop.
5-1§...-373-il
All alu1ninum,
storage o r 1 ,
$3;i D. Call
LAOrES \\"hire gold dia-~
monct & sapphire ring. .
Value. SllZ>-sacri!ice clnsc
csh.lle S-ITJ. 644-294.f aft 6
P~I
REDECORATING? Get a ,
1rff' 1'!11.hnall' on Vinyl anti
Linoleum. Lie. Co n t .
540-7772
J:;duC11.tlonal Vacation 5th \~•<!ntcn, many more Factory authorln"d clttr3n('(' . Quality king bed, quilted,
gnujcn , • , Sr CU1zeng misc Items reduced to % ol <>vtrage, rcturnr I.: den101 Con1plel<', unu~ $98: \\"Orth
OtllCOllt JO lt>uon typing price. Call 494-1036 Pianos & Organs. Praeuu $250. After S or \\·kn&,.
Sehl. TrlaJ l.n8on. 1i3 Del ~ pianos, new 1\•alnut tpl~t 847-l»OG ,
•·,,,",-,'=C=.M""'. ,.,"'""""~,o.:.;~~~ Garage Sile 8022 pianos, ~\v I: uM'd Grand5 DIAJ\10ND pif'l'tf'd earring!!. ~ --''-'--"'---..;....;.:I & demo Baldwin O~nnJ ,.._ MONTESSORI A Pft.School THE GARAGE I! l •·"rt. n&wl4!U. Cost $425,
hltd led ren y k tru Y on money !!I'll $150 cash. 6;a....uU ' c ren accep Ye a r Used Appl!ancM &: turnltun>. 13vln1t SALE? 1 Gel in on
round. Ages 21,t to 10. Call: B ,. r g a In 1 ! Dre as er the hit: deals at: DIAMOND rockt&il ring, 11p-r !
646-3706, Ml-5697 Vllrlitles, db1f! & 111gl beds, \VARD"S RALD\VIN ST'UDTO pra1:>t"d $775. sacrllice $300.
SOUTH Coll.st Saill"R sch!. S30 gall &. ~·lee s!o\'e.~. refr!g 1819 Nl'v.'J>Or1, c.~t. 612-843-1 673.-.1600 ,
Learn to aaU en 26' Race Pl & $30. l~ A Super1or, llAl\tlllOND • Stelnv.·a.v . Ya· CARPET all sryl~s "nd QQJ. , '
Soop. 64).1133 -CM. ~188 mah.a • MW & u1M planM <>rs. ~ l!slimate. Lfc.
SPANJSR • private tutoring ol II.II mflke.!1. Rt>~! bte·s. ht C.Ont . 5-l0-7262 J.
A or clu:8fa. YCIU1" hortte er Appll1ncn 1100 So. Calli. f4':hl tM>no. 8' CUSTO:i.I s u r 1 b 0 8 , d
mine. 54S-ll51 or ~56 NORGE GM l)rylT, 15 lb SClL'frDT MUSIC CO., pcrfl.'CI conftltlon; 1 year oki ,
PIANO LESSONS Ikitnnina cap. 2'ii yrs, 1Q'.>C1 1'1:lrkirta: l907 N, f.lnln, $50, s.17-65!H ~
ltudenll preL U.C.1 . Mu!ic cond. M0-2732. fl.take offer . S:l~ta Ana ;-fPc Maple dining set, 3 ~:
11-ltJor. Call BNct. 54&-4478. G.E. Auto washer, lalt P IANO WA NTED-hp po1i't'r mover, 2 )eve • 1
THE QUICKER YOU CALL, modtl, xlnt l!'!nd. $f1>o (213) 877-1035 P..1 PartY seal!!. 96&-3195 * --;1
THE QUJO<ER YOU SELL 1' 847-BU.5 * \Vhlt11 elf'phant~! 01.me..:l·llne Dhtl &12-5618 ror RESULTS 1J ----'-..;.:..==:.:.: ' .
r • c f _____ ...... __________________ ------
----------·-------------------------------
0
F
.c
'
'
'
J
-
SAL& AND TRADI FREE TO YOU TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRAHSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION
•
DAllY PILOT ,..., •
TRANSPORTATION:. ~;
UiOd e... 9filO • MERCHANDISE ~OR , ... , CrulMrt 9020 Motorcycles 9300 I AulOI
Mloc1l1t•;• , NGO CUTS lll"!'li -~ 21' ljUPER !port ,_,,,.. . e TRAIL BIKI e "'f!!!?'! -l""'°"od Aolleo • NII Aolleo Wllllod r-.~;-;;;.;;:,~j;4~ . r.:::....al!l!'l1•· :r,.,. Dos .,.. v" • 1n1e ... ..,. J.1118 ~ 1ow "'°'""'· DATSUN suN11Au n P•Y •
~ ... CUIY 9700 Ulod Can
I • ,.. ..... ~. ?-= "" -.,. Lib A .... Na. .... .• lrt.ll ..... l300, . '!" CASH OPENS ":';;c ........ PITS ... l1v•STOCK OR.__ .. -G3'1-'119 DATSUN "'l!IJNBIWI 'rlle'-n • .
CHEVROLET '6I _.._
Fiorino Plfnorl' ~I ~ --::; -0.. ·-· .... TiUUiiPli -· Bir -. ...... -"""" ,., dd, .-. -clll MM5.'lt'f e~r, • ~ --lfl!I !k! lutt 9030 low mlJu.re, paint 6 cam erw .• dlr, 4 IPd. Jtttio, 60-t&8T an. I pa. w wd am a tmcb Jmt
.;:=:,.==-='..==:S=.; I ~ M&lamuWt,, (alfd SKI •t, ~ 35• t:rtr., dttome. Private part 7 • beater, WIW t1re1, loaded! cllll • b flw ntbnat..
/Misc. W~ 16l~ ... ~ """'!;.~t..~~ ~ n~: ~ ~RAIL BIKE e =...,~ ~t111o%'::l TOYOTA GRODI CHEVROUT e 1 .__ ._.... ~. -..-over -. ,.._ S'l'5 cub dell, or older
;. ---., ..... -· .., • --t0. ..... trail•· ... LBD -. Call Biii TOYOTA u. ... -..._ WI PAY MOit£ -,. .. , - -a-pa ao.• E1e<-1 smt IS uae lill., PIO. Call S..mt I ,-~·~=====I
CASH. ~~ ... ~·'if,; ~~~·--· '"Y:Er:""' l';(;usH FORD 1?-~~.s!r. ~~~
TIWNED ~ -HYDROPl.l:NE. ft. .... , iiiii""1ilioffif''a.;;;:-r;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IHurry While Tiiey ulfl WE P''Y WH ~ .. ntla but .._, t• wido, w/u,ble 6 .... 198< HONDA. a.ui, """ A
m&nnmd bnu• d 0 I '. WOOd ...... $95. 549-<l530 ..... '!"· * ORANGE COUNTY'S L•...: I lolonthly P 1 m nt 1 OK. fl2.<!l9 VOLUME ENGLISH Ull'CI JOR YOUR W ..,.11• 00 CS.11m Morine Equip. 90:15 '6S TlllUMPll IOO, ... eor.. FORD DEALER
t::= Tortlor --'Ill O!RYSL!:R :io b.p. oloc. Tl'·pl-Blteo fqllJp. Xlnt SALIS• SIRVICE 'AK(:~ reg. Sired b)' inlms't 1W1 wtmnote A manual o:nd. $1'.lD. 51)...3283 .. NOD.ELS TOT01A·YOl.fC)
champ. Good w/chldm'. No control&. Battery, sp.ometu HONDA !II, bored to 105cc, lmmecUata delivery 1966 Harbor, C.M. ~-
CON NILL
CHEVROLET
$ WE Buy $ lheddtrc. odorloa. Call {I) • tank, URd jwit J hn., cut '°' dirt. Xlnt cond. LARll,!_~orCTlo ON BllL MAXEY
RSS-7903 ume a.a new. Complete Phone &n.ssu PYt. pty. 'rl9'lllU
$ FURNITURE $ GERMAN SHEPHERD 1395. 549--«i30 '61 TRIUMPH, -... ROllNS FORD I inlVIOI IAI CONFIDENTIALL y
APPLIANCES Pups, AKC Re&'d. Bl.ck ~ INBOARD It. outboard parts engine, k>ts of chrome. 150 2060 Harbor mvd, r T £"h T We Pay Mo~ Fot
,C•lor TV't-Pl•no't-Sf•N•'• tan, 6 week. 545-4682 It. accell!!Orles reasonable. ee. 646-4203 Costa Meaa 642-0010 P'orel~ Or Sports Ou'I
1 Pi1c• or Hou10 Fu ll OUTSTANDING J..c. Germ. 549--0530 SALE! Honda 50 SUpe:r dirt lllll BEACH BLVD. PAID FOR OR NOT
CASH IN JO MINUTES Shep pupa I Patent. on bike, ad. cond. $100.' Call Hunt. S.•ch 147-1555 B J SPORTSC • 541-45 3 I • P'""""· $31. 147-9936 lfts e .. t Slip Moo•lnt 9036 """'5 -FERRARI 3 ml N. ot Cout Hwy, on Bdl I I AR
WEIMARANER '"""' AKC. "WANTED" Sido tie "' slip '61 BSA 441 FERRARI 1968 TOYOTA CENTER
champ. sired, lhow quality. for 24• pov.-er boa.t. $$6. 56-1746 Newport lmporU Ud. Qr. Hardtop Coupe 2811 Harbor Blvd.
20$ ONYX
Bolboa l1lond
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR
•t '"" ANAHEIM
STADIUM
00 Jul!r "'I
CAPRICE
VI, automatic, factory air,
power •teer., power brakes,
po'o'/l!r windows, radio, beat-
er, vinyl top. SBN 712
. $1695
ATLAS 515-00S Call........ T .. 11 ••• Trovol 9425 ~ •~a1-·"' .. , ooi, .. -$1695.00 Cos1a M•M >lf>-1491 YORKSlilRE r.-, Pup. -~ -w·n B CHRYSLER -PL YMOUTII ~~~~"~'"c~""~:~ ~~~;~typ;Ud~~ !:'.P!:"1::~abt• ~:: ·:m~~ ~j. ':!".~ ~:~;f~.~~s Lk. TOYOTA Dir Yom V~~. ~ Po=ho co~~~~~: :~~l93'
WANTED-Bedi.. T r u n d I e.
riser, duplex.a>rner ~ps
or convt. sofa. Good cond.
only. MS-7829
'-=any"'=ti=m='====== I =-------cruise or maintenance. . wheels, Xlnt cond. $2,400. 642-9405 MG-1764 & top doll Pald f ;;;;;i"~;:;="-c;=.;:;-''.:'.'.:= 1· ~: Sare=.,;a_ mo. male 'PM>-548-3561 537-8178 aftu f pm. Authorized MG Dealer HEADQUARTERS or'::. Call R&li:· for 1950 OIEV, original w/1969
FREE TO YOU ~. uu~. Sbnw quality! ELMORE 673-0900 Ch.v '"< & !loo• •hUt , V•ry
---··---i ,,cLABRAD06U--""2240~,_,lfc,Rt-'-"'-~:..;,-pm.~----lat·Y•cht
9039
Trailers, Utlllty 9450 fiA1 WE PAY TOP clean. Will take trade $125. FREE Adorable kltten1 , ....,.,n..u:.,,c.n. Chartars 515 Hamilton,CM ~
black & black & whlte. 6 AKC female 7 mo. flS, ----"-----TRADE b$ uWU;y for small '67 FIAT 850 Spyde l t 15300 Bn.ch Blvd. W•tnmdr DOLLAR EL CAMINO N '67 283
wks old. ?ihat find aood l:c64>-=2798~-"~'-"-6-o7.pm.~-~ BLUE\VATER OiARTERS .. "":", ~~OK for \\'elsh mech. cond. Mus[' ~. Phone S!H-3.322 for rood. c1-.n u.d cm, 4-fpeed. ~ ~. ~/B
homes. 1989 Allaheim St, PUG Puppies, AKC rea:., 5 U Drive Sall or Power · $13'.Xl. &U-9421 · · &D maket. See Georre RQ RAH. $ll0), &H-C70f ·1
Apt. B, CbI. wks old. Cal Joyce St()..1301 ~~:s! ~ Trucks 9500 '58 ~T Coovertible new TRIUMPH n;:n ~~ord I ;:i'&C;,CllEV;;;;;;.1=;::,,:,:1111'=1.-';V;;.._....,,'-,~pd.
MINIATURE Doberman ! or ~136 646-9000 engme, hrN<, paint. $500. ,61 TRIUMPH GT e+ c.M IG-00!.0 dlr., pnf. ~ eond.
xlnt with chlldren. &brim, Yorkshire Terrier, female, 166 DATSUN Y, TON Will conslder offer. 642-83fl> BriUlb racina am. ._..;.1~=·-----'=..::= Taki fantp c.w tn trade.
4 mos. old. Call after 6 PM 8 mo'a old. AKC. SbDw Mobllt Homes 9200 JW1t reworked enrtne. Xlnt tape 5 mo. new $2800 DIPOR'll WANl'ED Wlll tine, prtlt prt,;y, IBR.547,
645--0757 6/'/1 quality. 646-8128 ---------condition. Local car, 4 spd, GLAS Prl~te party ~ 0ranp niuiitt• Call B1ll. 49f-.9T13
KIITENS W •. th ~-·~ BAY HARBOR di•, $75 cash dels. Take Jow • TOP S BUYER '63 CllEVY 4 d dlr 6 1 ' ... ..,.., ~. POODLE pups, b I a ck •s:; TRIUMPH MK-J S '!fire • r, • cy · Please pick one of oun:, miniature AKC rK Mobile Home Sales · pymnts. $38.86 mo. SIF669 • 1967 GLAS 1700 CC. OOHC rtlbt 11600 Cal!Pl BlIJ.. MAXEY 'roYO?A, xlnt cond. $'15. Cash dcls, dozens to choose from. ~'"" Cua Loma • Roll-Away Call Ken 494-9TT.3 or 545--0634 Very clean. Mu. 1 t 1tt!. conve e. · Mrs. 18881 Beach Blvd. five baJ $475. HAK804, Call
• COUGAll
V8, ••tomotle. ndlo, ,...,
factory air, ~ ..,._,
power brake .. wtitt. ..... :•
low, low mlln. (~
$2595 '
ATLAS '
OLDSMOBILE
. • .
• • BRANO NEW :1
'69 CUTWS
F-15 SPTS. CPE.
Deluxe belts front Ii rear.
podded ...... tully """" equipped.
$199 ON. $65 Mo ..
$2399
Plus Tax A Lle.
Payments Include tax and
llceNe and ftnancti charges :
on 48 mo.nth&. Approwd
credit. SertaJ No. 33JTI9Zll.
63SL
University
Oldsmobile 549-3183 6127 Sheraton Manor -Homette . '60 EL CAMINO. 283 auto, Must sell thil week. (213) Halldn, S4G--500J H. Beach. Ph. an~ Ken, MS-0634
AFFECTlONATE Calico kit-~· =uze~~ Kit . Pmtige -Sa.hara RJ3·.3011,Pl225M cash. ~12!M aft HE 2-1841 ews. er 642.-2623 VOLKSWAGEN Auto Leasing 9810 .• ~59,.-CH=EV=.~s,~.-. ~,~ •. -goodc--i
ten: female. 6 wks. box-S50 to S90'. 838-41Ji.c ALL SIZES cond. $200 642-9178 after 6 2850 Harbor Costa ltltsa '
tramed. good w/kld•. NOWONDISPLAY l'6'l OODGE v..,_ big 6, JAGUAR '69VW's .... LEASE .... f:!:p:m::;°':="':;'.,..=':•;::m'=== 540-9640
968-1345 6/26 AOORABLE Fema!e Toy . 142 B•ker St. RiH to XInt nd. •--.,,,,.-,=~c--,-,,c;--Poodle Black. white spot on ' au . co '64 XKE IMMEDIATE DELIVERY l969 Cad Cpe de Ville, pwr 1 '66 Olds Convertible BEAUT. all black mother
cat, both long &: thort
haired k i t t e n 1 al10.
~ bklck East of Harbor mvd. $1725. -.2040 or 540-4006 M roadster, best offer, Bank n ... -i... wind, 6-way it & dt Joclca. COMET
chest. AKC SJ(I. 893-JJOO on Baker 1967 FORD F llXI Truck, 6 S.:t~ also surfboard $21J •DOWN tOt itr Wb1. air ~. ~ with ~~~ ralllo
pOAK>ClERIAN ~ps. Chmalsim:I, Costa 1t1esa (TI4) 5-ID-9470 cyl. 3 tpd stick; 20,oo:l ml. Mt.Ga * • mOI ·· ray slul. AMIJ'M, •/alw. 1998 a:>Mrr Cyclone, 390, •i==;;;;o~=o:"""""';:::=
642-0896 612.8
MOVING Need specia1 home
for active female mixed set·
ter. 10 mos. all black
643--7100 6/24
reg. ~•"'· 1' "· GREENLEAF PARK Xlnt"""'.115Cif1J96U'l35 KARMAN l'luolllnll-lar 149 ll6S mo. 'lid, mqs. lluot ..U. Bost PLYMOUTH
oome bav. "'°"· 6U-m< tn cl..,., "'""· ""'' °"" *SHELCS * N GHIA title. l'all I lf• ~~ ·· SOUTH COAST /~-~·~'~"~-~=~== -
TRANSPORTATION ~~ ,.:',:., ",. ~:;: ~;:;: ~-ld/cbeap. FOR sal" Kormann Ghia ml ........... A"'"1llil!f al CAR LIASINll '66 PLYMOUTH
localod at Park. Opeo 9 AM .. (j '3&-UOO eo....... 19511. Now ..... ..:,, !!. ~~ ' 300 w. Cit lhly, NB -CORVAIR
9 MONTH old female Part
toy Collie needs good home
preferrably "1th clilldren.
67>-1563
BOX springs and mattreu.
Overstuffed chair. 427 L
Bay, Balboa: Bet. 10 am 6 ' t
pm. 112'4
to 6 PM. runs good. ms. 642-7!M7 su.mc J'IRll' TDIEI a..ASIIC '82 Corvi.tr. 1'1blf't
NEEDS ENGINE 30 ft ACCENT MOB!LE Campers 9S20 at a.di ma5ID. . OPEN SUNDAY Lule a New '69 for fi Months dune . buggy, $250. ~2758
Sportflsber, 10 fl beam, HOltfE SALES * PAM-TOPS * LOTUS & return with no obligation. ct:orri=ll'~'°=""=·~===
completely fiberglassed. l T;,Q Whittier Ave. All steel •hells. Sal6 re ren----------1 '68 V W Call Mr. Malcolm Reid far -
Transon1 stern, o Pen Costa Mesa n4: 642-1350 tals.. $149 up. Buy fac tory * '62 LOTUS E 11 t e . • • Full Details Now
cockpit, trunk cabin, full 10' x 50' + 24, encl porch direct lOlD So. Harbor, SA. Everythina: 11 e w. See Radio & ll~ter. FuD:t tac-&U-0010
Boat• & Yach~• 9000
COUGAR
FURY Ill '• 4 Door hardtop. VS, automa-
tie, factory air, power fleer-'
ing, pov.•er brakes, radio,
:)ter, white walls, (SMC
plley, fully equipped tar W/ltllW alum. awn I ng , sg CiifV. P.U. 6 -.i wJ tradmo'i ad. * -.m tory equjpped. VGZ lit, J'ord Authorized ~~ur:!.~;tt~~"; romp, furn. 2 BR. Ire BA HJwa, Crulaero.J•IMll ..._ $1695 Leasing 3y1tem
No. A99, "C" street, Newpt w/tub &:. showt'I', lots of camper. Oooct c 0 n d . MERClulS IENZ Theodore
'67 COUGAR VS.289 Air, .
PIS, P/B $2250. Xlnt rond.
6Th-2910 or 6'13-S299
$1495
ATLAS NEED food, shelter for
..... oned -"'"°" manx &: maltese Is wht kit-
ikh •• , oall (nl) 54H619 "'"""· ki~ llv rm,'""' eptd 548-6911 I--: _____ ..;__:. ROBINS FORD
la1t mo. forced air beat ,;;;..;;,,""----~--ATLAS llERTRAM MOOD 11rm. ,,..2532 Laa 1981 r • Winds c.IMMr ""'Harbo< Blvd. DODG1! CllRYSLEli -PLYMOUTII
Exceptional Savine• Bch Camper ..... f. $1300 tr Ollta Me• 642.COlO 29'29 itARBOR BLVD. ten. ~ until 4 p:ni.
MUST find 5 good homes tor
mother and 4 kittens. I 'fib.
old . House broken.
836-44!>3 8/U
~~YMOEQD~ i.O'l'S FOR OUR NEW .:::--~-!;:·~·~·0::,:r.!:c....~·~~~.:..~-!...·'-"_'· CHR.;.."l:.oor~J,1:'78 u=-;..:::=c.= .. ====9900~;1 ,61 DODGE POLARA co~.~ 'til 10':'"~ w-'~'"" 0~•-llOB!LE HOMES. OCEAN· .-COSTA MESA .... ,.,. ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 Bahia lt1ar * Sportlm.U TRONT ADULT PARK. WANTED: Dill Camper Open Daily 'HI 10 p.m. Coupe, VS, automaUc, factory LEAVING oountry must sell '
J . ii. Richanfson Co. 5J6..l500 for I' bed truck. Prefer , .. VW air, power steering, power 1965 PIYDIDlltb hr1 ll, f
ll01 Bay1ide Dr., NB fTJ,.{1851) i,30,;:;.:_,;;;;:,--.,-----Pullman. Good eoad. N5-DCS brakes, po1o11er windows, pow., =D=R.=11'1>=. =-=====I NEEDS bome • Himalmyan
Siamese seal pt. m&1e ~II
mo. Daddy 1dcklna b1m t
~74. 114
l!w rn~~ "bo~--~·b'-&i• ~ • ..,er It~ •t Excellent condition'"''"'"~ a 1 ~ "n uuaru u ·•-\.a m .__,. k I N-.. _ er seals, radio, heater. ...... er par n ... ,...... Com•rt -..,,==:--::"""'='I _,. """' ....... crtam ext pl"·' PONTIAC Cruller. Gd cond. Slip avail, :&etch. NI bath. $2,llm. ~ IO:ftCEDD 190 IL '"'" ·--, • .... u whlte walla, vinyl top, tinted
Vf!t'/ telY.'Orthy. $ l 9 7 5 , Owner (JU) ~2705 I;;:;:;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~/ COUPE. a z A UT Ir tr L black lntlrlor. $125 Cub 1la.u, loaded car with bal-
l'B-9361 CAMPIR 0 NE· 0 W NE R CAR. dtla:, dlr, Of trade· take low ance of new car warranty. PREITY amb<' & wblto < TRi:ILElt !PACE fo• l!x35. SHOWROOM CONDITION. pymnts, IA Viti ISi, Call (UJV671)
mo. old girl k 1 tty . ENG. Couple seek WDr1c Tradwind Tn.ller VUlage Sales• ltental1 $1600 PV. PTY. 17)-.,_ Bill, 5'5-0114
83S--O.i74. . 6/24 •hare exp. on priv. aail., 21Jl Harbor Blvd. CM A thartztd Dea) '""'' :-=,.=..,-,,---~--I $2095 Hawaii July-Aug 5J6..6930 Adult park-no -is. · u rt 300 SE Mercedes 8'm Sedan 'et VW, reblt. eng., tram., · AOORi\BLE fluffy kittens .-Eldorado • Four Wind• ·~ , _ t•· •·t 1 clutch; R&.H; xlnt cond '68 DATSUN 1600 Spt Rdst
e 673-0629e 12· TRI.HULL Bay Boat. LIOOPark,Lovelytrailer & Scotmian .Barracuda ""• ....,a .. l!r ui , eec. ~Ask for JeU after 2 PM ....................... $2009 ATLAS
==°""'=="'==.,-,6=1'6>=-I 2ll7 S. Lyo~ cabana 2 bdr. Bay view, 8' Ca~ Low All. :'..'• m:~nd. woo. c494-:c,;'"50;;;==,...-,"°"'-~-'&S PONTIAC Le Mans, 32ii,
FREE FREE FREE 3 KIT-ADULTS, patio $I• i 5 0' MO.S:1"'# 800 '81 iO>i (-· f Dr. Sedan) -l96f VW. Xlnt cond. V-8, con10le shilt, ps, real CHRYSLER -PLYMOtmi
TENS , TRAINED. S.llboats 9QlO ;m-sl29:::.c=c.:•::...;;'1WUl;;;,::=: ___ I T1teideN Alr-oond,tleowlndowi , New~t~~...;.,$950. .~~~.··m:~499pe, 29'l9HARBORBLVD.
546-5155 8~ ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;; NEW 24', 6 nu. 2 ba tmD1. .ut-nt '5,..:i. ~2l.U"--"'";=;;i~"';i•o;:;,•~"7";,...-COSI'A MESA 546-1934 • --Hunt."7 tbl... ROllNI flORD ., '57 v~. '""· ••• "'"" "" 1599 Open Dnll,y 'til 10 p.m.
'68 POlll.IAC
Catalfn'a Wagon
3 U>at, VB, automatic, fac.
tory air, power steering,
poo.ve:r brakes, ndio, heat-:
tr, white walls. (VFR161)
$3195
ATLAS 2 MALE ,,.,..ball< I oilvtr, ALBERG 35 N •M ~--to porty, VW SEDAN '61 FALCON, 2 dr, aoto 1299 ==~======I 1 blk & brown ~;-, o. ...... _.,_ "3eO Hanar ll'ld. ANIXIOUS TO SELL .,...,. '61 MERCURY, 4 dr, pg $199 FORD
897-r,480 6/26 5 \Vatts 58.lls lnOH QUALITY XLNT Oleta .... IOCl110 METRO 1919 Court St, N.B. Many others to choose frum om.YSLER -PLYMOUTH :
ADORABLE Persian kittens. llot It. Cold shov,,er mnd, I elite O>ola Sp rut '67 VW BUG, It. blue w/gry. e TERMS AVAILAILE e ----·--· ---2929 HARBOR BLVD. :
7 .,.,.ks. old. "'caned and radil).optit.a il-<'tc. $35 lmmld PCI"' ~ CAMPER., \o6; ctb "fff, 1950 MEI'RO, AS IS int. Many extra.a, must lell! 'S9 FORD Station Wagon. V-COSI'A MESA 546-1934 '.
hsebrkn. 968-1907 6/24 $18,888 '58 U'NIVERIAL 1 Ox IO• t,utaM, tttn1, ltoft, llPI ~ S1J. wlll tell Individual parts. Call Cbril; 675-7757 1953 CHEVY, 6 cyl, 3 spd fir 8• auto, PIS, P/B, R&H , Oren Dally 'lil 10 p.m.
e PACIF1C YACHT SALES• ........ , .... _ --...1 _.. 5. $150 ~ Newport B _, uuo hi" •• If new rubber, good cond. ~ • I SNOWBALL. 1 brn & blk v-'Y _.. _... -. • ' ~ '68 VW sunroof radio 14 000 1 "• uo:St 0 er over $250. $250. See to appreciate. 1S07 69 FIREBIRD. 350 eng., •
tiger &: 1 black Calico. 21;~·1~~.~portii.,~=70 Adult puk. POO. -.ms C'M mi xint cond'. one ·~. Also 1!161 T-Bird, recent Apt. B., Alabama, H.B. vinyl top, pow/S, wide .
83&-4493 6/26 MGB 60-2311(1 aft. S·ll paint Job SSOO. ~1634 or 536-8TI4. ovals. 6500 ml. Must sell . ""~~!!!!!!!!!!~"""!!!!"'IMotorcycl• noo C.mP!r lttntall 9S22 . see at }(64 Concord St.,1 "'~=~,....~~~-best offer. pvtpty. ~7849 '. 1t1ALE Kitten free to good FLIPPER 8 ft Bikini blue I:.:;:::..:==:::..--...:..::;:.: MG '64 VW, new 1600 eng., gu.ar., CM '65 FORD Ctny Sed, V-<, au-
b:lme. 646-i997. Very af-& white, fbrgls, xlnt cond, 1965 YAMAHA YRDS 3, 250 * EXPLORER * Sales, Service, Patti new Int., 1tereo. XI.NT ..;·=· ====== kl, dlr. xlnt cond, Inside & l96R PONTIAC G1'0 3 spd, :
fectionate. 6/24 #134. Fact instal nib rail, cc, ru111 good. less than By week or month Llmlrl· lmmediate Dellvery, cond. 673-5634 BUICK out. $75 ca.sh dels or foreign auto, Pis, cordova top,
1
FEl\tALE 8 wks old Cocka-hoisting rings, oarlock fit. 14,500 ml. !148-5761 o·~ SleeP' •, Seti _ .. ,_,_ AD 'l~-i. '68 V\V Bus. 14,000 miles. ·--------1 car in trade UEV 484, call st~reo tape. Can finance. :
t. ·~• or bo•t '"e -" '"""........ ......,. K 4n• .,...,., Contact 531-7474 or 673-5629 poo puppies. BuU colored, ings. .,,..,, ou r. 1963 BSA 650 Thunderbolt ed. Limited number, Call $2400 or best offer. 644-2966 '65 RIVIERA, all equip., en, .,.......,, '·'
adorable 675-53;,Q eves. 4M-TI68 Brand new Jan '69. 2700 ml. today. .~•~twn=G-8~,__pmc.·----very clean. Nds body wrk, LATE '67 Cortina ata wag '&S GTO, euto, p/s, 45.ooo :
s ?tfO. Old male poppy. RAWSON 30, like new. Hing· Best offer 675-6694 LEISURE RENTALS '63 VW Sedan, new brakes & $2100/bcst. 642-8584 dlx, Roa( rack, radio, lm. mi, ~all U"Ound xlnt cond. : ·' m••I o•<om g-'t & 11700 bk val Make oUer. 4!$-~ Shepherd & Collie mix. "" · " w ey 650cc Tt'lwapb BonnlvilJe ncJ M211U, (U4) 137-3Q Urea, exeeL cond. 67J...6033 mac. ue, aacfr -========
9 'IO!l'. 546-3955 6/26 inter, electronics, + Xtras. 1960 re-btlllt •I'll. ' new 1 ,""~.,,',,6,...._____ CADILLAC ruoo. 962-CM7 ...
s p u N Ky ki tten 1 , 2 Sn-fi698 clutch. Nice. C99-2957 Dune ,.,..._ 9S25 , '67 VW pick-up, recently ---'61 J"ORI> V/8 1uto trami, p RAMBLER
orange/white 2 calico. Will 26' ENDEAVOR f b I gs. IS YOUR AD IN a.ASSI• ... BUGGY """° nd .:J.:· CGiut 11Wf1!f.B. ow:rtlaw.t. $950. '65 CAO Coupe de VWe fore.. _ 8, heat, 1tr cond, new tln?s, --------
deliver. S45-3520 S/27 sloop, gd cond. Shock built. FJSl)f .. FD,I ..W lie .., • · -1714 64f..l'T7S ed to sell. Car is lmmac. WOf'ldnl m&N W110ft $295. '66 UMBlfR
FREE: lo good ho(lle -pup-?.1oorin& ~v;t';i.~ 1oold'W b tt. OW Ml.n = ::., :e;';. = Autbartmd lill l*a. '6S VW ~ •i' 8undJ.al 30,oo:l ml . Full pv.rr. $2,395. ,;'.;;41;.,9881;;;,;~~~-~-
6 •·· lxed 1n~ ~. I ' rtw pv, pty. 968-284() 66 J'OM Fa'..1---GTA. Amb1111dor --tr!!d.3 ~~~ w....,,., m CAL 28 fully eqpd. Spin-'211 •ii btfNE bum'· FiiJllllUI MGI ~i!ss ~""m-= _...,. $ 2 5 O. EXCEP'I'IONAU.Y R/H 1'actory Af~&or auto 2·Dr. Htnlt;;"'
l>"REE kittens to i o o d :~r~~:sCfJ~lde1:°~ = c.n-:...::-body. '190. DJUITl:DI 'II Ill 0 B 'SI VW automaUc, Sunroof clean '00 Cad. Good ahift, radial tire1., mue book V-3, iutomatlc, factory eit, ' horn -...,_,_ ndio, l:xtru. Xlnt cood. me c h an I ca 11 f . See to $1920, mutt 1ell $1775. power itccr, radlo, healer. ·
es. offers. Call 846-3711 ,_ ... ..,.. wft whll1I. 1'lnt believe! 549--0844 ~721 (SIR 103) • 1 ~==~53&-~~z.t_'i::,_~.,-, SLOOP 24·, cabin, star rig, lg1rf!d Autos.\ HOO ~...-:. ~ ~ after I:_,. 6W '67 CADILLAC D 1VI 11 e 'l!I FORD Cm11na 1ta wag, f $1395
KIITENS,dyf1ofiy ln00og hairedth SeagoU ! hp, dinghy, " Tired "' "'--'-? VOLVO cnnvt. Top rond, tully tqU!p. opd, di•, extro d,.., reblt
ones, rea lo go me "'1 mooring. $%JOO. 6 3 3-3 8 9 O nl:'r ... U_SE..,.,. OF"'• OPR * 675-4244 * q, $771 d1l1Ym1. NGR 431
)'OU today. 494-885.S 6/26 ~ -" ATLAS ...,_ e Botng tumed down? e No VOi.VO '62 Coupo O.VU!e -Bill, -CUTE Puppies, part poodle 6 HOURLY RENTALS T -M ri Id Cd M. 1
wks. old. After 5 PM call * Rhodes 19's * down ~ent e Out of '66 OPEL Wagon. 27,oo:l ml. iw ,!. go ~.-. N FORO Q&lu)o HT, 2 Dfl
847-4452 61'17 lfate credit? . Exceptional cond. Must lell 8J4-....,..3 or v•~ Power $415. OIRYSIZR. -PLYMOUTl l
Fw> ?.ooo Boat Co. Balboo HEIDQUlllT••• c.n uo tar Immediate aollon by ·-,.._1797 NEW 164 * * 96Z-1514 * * 2929 HARBOR BLVD.
3 KITTENS. 7 ""'-old, ma!• OOLUllBIA I.I, fib<oglau ...,. * 193-5031 * & CAMARO 1958 FORD xln _,, ~ COSTA llESA >16-1934
lo1:1t haired, ,,·hite & r:raY· &loop, trlr., 14 extras. $1.000. • 1960
1 ~'tu~~ .... wtrad.,-. ~!7 NEW 1IOO Will ·take' ~. $150.-'MS, _.-fl!",,_n=D=a=Uy°""''til=ll>'='-P_.m_._ I
6U-IJ22 6/71 .....,,,, 6U-1181 FOR ALFA ROMEO ~~~ .. ::-c.. ... -· NOW ON DISPLAY ... CAMARO 3 opeed ""·RI ll&milton. CM. ,. PRE-OWNED
KITTENS' 6 wto;. H•b•kn. 2 LIOO 14 No. :ms, good cond. IDTDRHOIU _ " L H, PS. yellow wlblk Int., •i8 ~TD Countey lqulro BIO SELECTION
hlack. l ca1ico, 1 tiger. Full n.c'g gear, covn, )Td AllA J\amlO 1116 Spdat aAR"CHI ...... ....: I Heart attack, must tell. Prt.. Loaded llr, power 1teerlna A '61 nmu '68'•
897-5944 6/26 dolly inc. n:n:i. 548-ffi6 O.T. llOO GI moc.' whMI rv 'ill' 14111. WllO vate party. 633..s4l2 braktl etc. W6-4166 ALL MODELS
KIITENS, Loog haim blacl< P-G\T RACE REAOY :::..... "":;; .7:'.i, ": '"8 PORa:Rli I , llllr, •I IMPORTS CHEVROLET l960 FOii!> ltotlon W-e ~N ':"" e
male & tiger fmt. weaned It $HIS a.u. ,._ 'fl q . l'f. •oe. Man, D • f OTOf' -----------I $.175 or OJ'FER. BRAND NEW '69 $1998 hlbrtcn. 49-1-7927 6126 &U-3TI6 -tru. m w aua 8IYd. -.. -,, ...
UA LIDiO -V-Ho. f, N.& ii.11111 1111 ,,._, CM. 6'&Cl3 ,,.. CHEVY lmpal• SS. l-===*="8=ml==*== e ~ aood ..... 1111. -•• -m ;r:r I ... =VO Riii, outo, P/ .. &tr.condo MUSTANG • ,; YOU \\'ill not believe the!M!
k I t t e n s . E:<traon:linory
Hem 57 varielles. 6r:>-5983
LIDO 14 No. 3i6l w/trlr.
Excellent condition. 2 yn
new. $1339. MS-3985 Ews
3 P1lETTY killen~ looking 13' METCAii with 2 sall1,
for happy borne, Please call new mast It boom. Poor
67J..l07l trall~r. $150. 646-6m
4 DARLING white kittens, 2 LIDO IC -
Marnr. 962-0021 New hand trtr. fi73-67J2
MJJ,.E Cray & white Pen.ian
cat. 546-C>? 6/2' Power CrulMn 9020
......... !QttmL I , w.eb d4: .. •H -.7<• • fi SLEEPER. 26 'f!Oj&n W.. ~ an Cream Puff. 150 W, RT.
SMAU, DlelJll ... M > sWim 1ti!p, davits $8750. .,.... ___.-. If" .,. am O~D 20'1 ---· 9£;:, o.;K;:,:OO:,HLER=~Kntt=::-:c.=btn-1 6~ after 9:9:1 PM 8/11 Crul1tt. Chrysler eng. XCL
3 MPM'EN'S and mother. cond. $2975 or oil. Call
• __., IW Ill ..
DODGE "EXPLORER" .... ~ .......... ......................... ---•U l ln.L 21 ,..,., :n POOT,
19 rMT. ) "lAU rl•AIC.
Ill Al Al',101'1:• CllllT.
S4Ml!5 •rn ..:..,.:::...:""'=------' ;== .. •
~ w/llllt "5-2511 !':."~ po;:.1· $15511. 981-!!Jtl _...;.......:;...____ • .... ,;._ ~ '-_.~ ....
AN.II & _, -Ill--TllJ: ON!!! 00 Mu-..... or· --· ii== bee Cors, Rods 9620 1963 CHEVY n Nova -· t I + I dll1"10 w/ ,..,... • SUI.AIU "'· auto ...... R/lL Good uto. -°""" w/ only -~
1B ANGLIA llzulre ..... ----·-----1'«1 om.vs. Heml 392 Torq. cond. 847-3656 around lf,000 ml. Mwit au. "'et~IWIBL~==-m~-~-,ri~can~. 2
'"'" l"od. """""'tton Subaru of CaDf, Tnl-. OtdL dlU. 1311>, 1 ct> '55 CHEV :kl• ltOOd •1111· '" lmmed. sale. Pvt. Pcy. d"
spttlal. $95. 875-.2273 nn whll. Nil tlrt1 $90. A.M. Good Um. $200. MU51' -~14:;:1-ll::;;";;,.--=----1 147.JaO . lnc,-Retail Div, !JC.-04!9 ..... day" 6'>-8095 '67 LIKE """· Tape, "'w =======,I
DATSUN $1297 POE NOW'~ THE '6' Chovy SS Impala Conv. polntaSI ""''· ~-6
--------Opt equip $30. Fretaht $1f.SO 327 ena. orig. owner. $500 cyl. •till on warrant)'.
ORAHOE COUNTY'S ~· "'1. 1139tUO TIME FOR cub ot ...._ &C-4134 !>46-""' ~ ~ Zlnt oATsu':i0o~ALlll " ~~~u,, ...... fUICK CAIH 'i i:1itri Mi " -.. llWl'.ANO. -• eyr, ~ ~ ww ltOll • -· ' " THIOU•H 'A -.. Cid. --,,., ..... p(b, U,OGO .. u... -• ~ 15 DOT DATSUN l4J4lllO * lf'I l UVIWIOlf a. ~-...-........ 1111n111or.tw.
1S835 --. 11 ''iOlii lb IH l!Ja DAILY PILOT -lilrrtt r:::o,,... 11 'ifiillfflllO ob, -· 11att, CiUilC.,. r..a1111. ,, _c,:IG-::H::;~=ro"..:":....::~="'=--ll;:m="'="'"-T .:::-:....:1~:....:~=...':-:.:::::bl::l.--W.:.::.;Ac;;_NT.:.::.;c,:A..:.::D __ l~:!';,=MI:..' _""'_Ml. ____ ...,_ ::S. ,::;..,~':""'! SacrttlceR::'. GOOD 4!1<-1069
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WATERMELON " .
c DELICIOUS
RED RIPE
ICE COLD
WHOLE •••• lb.
CUT WATERMELON ..•.•...•.... 6f.
SWEET • LUSCIOUS
SEEDLESS GRAPES
FRESH •. CRISP
LETTUCE
BLUE GINGHAM • 303 CAN • CUT
GREEN
BEANS
120 SHEET • PRINTED OR ASST'D.
CHIFFON SAVE 25c
TOWELS ioc .
•
LIQUIDAM • Qu~~~ eoT2ne 9c
DETERGENT
3 OUNCE PACKAGES
BUDDIG'S SLICED
SMOKED MEATS
PROCESSED AMERICAN • INDIVIDUAL WRAPPED Sl1C
0
ES
CLEARFIELD
CHEESE 16.oz. PKO. 77c
DAIRY FRESH • PROCESSED
CHEESE 99c
LOAF ..... 2 LB ••••••
STORE HOURS: DAILY 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
SATURDAY AND SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M.
I
•ROMAINE
• RED LEAF .
MORTON'S • 1 ;.oz.
CREAM
P"IE.S :
4·.,F$
O·
R .•
SAVE 34(
. . . •
DISCOUNT PRICES
and TOP · QUALITY
'NO STAMPS,• NOGAMES . ' .·
NO GIMMICKS ..
JUST EVERY DAY . .
LOW DISCOUNT PRICES
PLUS 4 STAR SPECIALS
4-STAR SPECIALS ••• What are they?
4 STAR SPECIALS ARE EXTRA SAVINGS MAOE
POSSIBLE BY SPECl:A.l PURCHASE FROM THE.
MANUFACTURER AND PASSED ON TO YOU
EVERY DAY. . £.-"'-~.
PRICES EFFECTIVE: JUNE 25 • JULY 1
WEDNESDAY THROUGH TUESDAY
GARDEN FRESH
CUCUMBERS
JULY 4TH SPECIAL
RED-WHITE-BLUE
CARNATIONS
,
'··''. . ,~· l • ' ., . \
. '
2;.oz. BOTTlE
WESSON
. Ol'L ,
WE CARRY
USDA
. CHOICE
, OR
FAD'S OWN
"TENDERFUL" 'BEEF
GUARANTEED TENDER & FULL OF FLAVOR
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR FAD "TENDERFUL"
CHUCI(
STEAK
FIRST 59c CUT
. LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR FAD "TENDERFUL"
ROUND
STEAK
USDA CHOICE OR FAD "TENDERFUL" ROAST 97c
BONELESS SHOULDER CLOD 1b. ~~~97c
' ;
. SAN,TAANA
LB.
U.S.D.A. CHOKE OR FAD "TENOEl!fUL •
T·BONE · or 1.49
CLUB' STEAK . tb •
. ECONOMY PACK
SLICED HALF &9r.
PORK LOIN . . ' .
2120 SO. BRISTOL AT WARNE~
COSTA MESA
2200 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON
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